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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 13

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Chicago Tribunei
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0 4, SA TURDAY, NOVEMBER I 894-SIX'iii4 PAGES. THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE BECORD OF OUR NAVY. FORMS A NEW CHURCH TALK OF OUR CASK Continued front enintit page- gOOND VOLUME Or MACLAY'S TOBY; FROM 1775 TO 1894. t- MAN Or PRONOUNCED TRAITS WILL PREACH TOMORROW. Foot 17 and lito-- IL se 14.0 0 Buy Direct From the Manufacturers.

dangerous moral questions. To the dramatist the license is less liberal. Mr. Caine pleaded for the twin angels of freedom and truth If the novel and the drama are to act upon life they must be at liberty to represent it. not in One aspect only.

but in all aspects; not in its Sunday clothes merely. but in its weekday garments not ID part, but altogether. You tell me that that fraught with dangers. So it is, with great dangers. You say he world is not all tit for all eyes to look upon.

True, but the dangers of life are Worse than the dangors of books. The speaker took his art very seriously, declaring that the place of the great dramatist, the great novelist, was that of a temporal providenceto answer the craving of the human soul for compensation in the midst of the inequalities of the worldto show us that success may be the worst failure, and failure the best success. It will be seen that he flatly differs with those who hold that literature is a sort of intellectual soporific. Care n9t where the latest roses Linger on the ground. Bring me myrtle, nought but myrtle Myrtle.

boy, will well combine Thee attending. me carousing, 'Neath the trellised vine. And now one may put by its side this Ingenious parody. daringly addressed to Mr. Cyril Flower (Cyrilius Flosculus): Oriental flowers, my CyriL (Save of language) I detest; Cull for me no costly orchid To adorn my blameless breast.

Nor essay to deck my raiment With the blushing English rose, For its brutal Saxon odor Aggravates my Scottish nose. Me as Minister the fragrance of the leek cloth most arride, With the shamrock and the thistle In a triple posy tied: so. beneath my grand umbrella, Firmly fixed ou College Green; Let us deviate from duty, In a deluge of poteen. (The odes of Horace translated into English by W. E.

Gladstone. Charles Seribner's Sons.) Charters of Now Ilempshiro Towns Settled bubsequent to 2679.Prof. Von lintst's Lectures on "Tito French Revolution Gladstone's Translation of the Odes of The Lilac by S. R. CrockettAn Ent lish Editors nooks.

Continued from tenth, Page. rp tv 1-7- 9 .041 .1 dap-- lif dielP1''' 11 Altei'' ri. 111111C I 1 2:11 S' tTrg 11 '2 V'1 i II 01 1 :1 I 1 sr I 5 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 I I 1 i I 1 I 0 il i '115 1,1 I( 41 'ill'i 4eCo.1 q.e;;v i 4 i 4 p- awe' li0 0., 4-----, tr. k- .017.10.. waft.

,4,, This Rev. Samuel 41. Smith Will Occupy tho Pulpit at Central Church Forms Peculiar and Distinctive Church at St- Paul, That Prospers from the StartForsakes Methodism Early la His CareerAn Interesting and Convincing Speaker. The pulpit of the Central Church will be filled tomorrow morning by the Rev. Samuel G.

Smith. pastor of the People's Church in St. Paul, and one of the most prominent and successful independent ministers in the country. Dr. Smith will arrive in Chicago this morning.

He was born forty-twe years ago in England. His parents removed to this country when he was but a child and settled in Iowa. He was educated in that State, and was graduated from Cornell College. After being for three years principal of the Albion Seminary, he followed in the footsteps of his father and entered the Methodist ministry. He was stationed first at Qa.ge and then at Decorah, Ia.

Subsequently he removed to Minnesota and was for three years pastor of the First Methodist Church in St. Paul. At the conclusion of this pastorate, to, 1 I ii; sy f- I 0 0 PIANO AND ORGAN FACTORIES OP 0 W. W. KIMBALL cnicAcio.

KI MBALL PIANOS were accorded rtisevi rtylltat- -VIZ at. --14-4 I If I i VstL C) thick LAYERS 0 LEATHER, CORK, and LEATHER. COLD CANNOT PENETRATE STREETER CORK SOLES. HIGHEST HONORS at the 0 WORLD'S FAIR and are used and recommended by de Ite ok stk, Ed de -deatita. Joan de It eaten, Ed de Notes and Gossip.

Mr. Hardy, it is said, has changed the title of his new novel, "The Simpletons." becaase one of Charles Reade's stories wit called The Simpleton." "Father Ambrose," Steele Mackaye's much talked of novel, will be ready this moutti by the publishers, Deshler. Velch Co-, New York-The tirst edition will be 50,000 copies. The visit to this city of Dean Hole, the English ecclesiastic and lecturer. has directed public attention to his reminisceeces, entitled Memories of Dean Hole" and "More Memories of Dean Hole" (Macmillan The new story by Mr.

Crockett, which the Messrs. Putnam have entitled The Play-Actress," is said to have been written before The Raiders" or "The Lilae Sun-Bonnet." The latter work is now one of the best-soiling books on the Appleton list, but it is The Manxman" that leads. By "Trilby alone is "The Manxman" surpassed. Harper tlz Brothers will publish this month an illustrated volume on four American Harvard. Yale, Princeton, and Columbia, by Prof.

Charles Eliot Norton, A. T. Hadley. W. M.

Sloane, and Brander Matthews. all graduates of as well as instructors in the institutions about which they writeall except Prof. Sloane of Princeton. who is an alumnus of Columbia. Messrs.

Harper tt- Bros. purpose Issuing in a volume the collected poems of Thomas Dunn English. the author of the pathetic ballad of "Ben Bolt" with which Trilby thrilled her audience. Mr. English was born in Philadelphia in 1819.

He took a medical course at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating from there in 1839; then studying law, he was called to the Philadelphia bar in 1842, but found literary pursuits more to his taste than legal practice. Moving to New Jersey, he served in the Legislature there during the war and in 1800 was elected to the National House of Representatives, being reelected two years later. $3. and up. Adelina Patti, Emma Calve, Lillian Martina, Li ill Lehmann, Minnie Rauh, Emma Albans, E.

Marie Tavary, P. 8. Gilmore, Pol Planeon, End' Lien ling. gig. Tamagno, idaz lavartt, thg.

De 8arasittn, Luigi Raven'. Oa Adelina Pattl. Emma Calve. Jean Lessall, L. Mancinelit.

Eevignani C- M. Ziebrer. J. Phillip bones. Robert Goldbeck.

Luigi Amin'. E. RernenyL Glee. Ferugint Ent. DM Puente.

big. De Lucie. Emil Fischer. Ovid. Idusin.

JuL Peretti. Mario Ancona. 5 A I vi, 0 4-, 1 -e- z- I 6 THE BEY. EL G. SMITH.

.1 The Lilac Sunbonnet. 0 S. R. Crockett keeps to his familiar Galloway for the scene of his new novel, "The Lilac Sunbonnet," but, instead of a tale of rapine and adventure like "The Raiders," it is a love story, with nothing more thrilling in it than a split in a sect of Scotch Presbytefians. Though each lover has a rival the course a their true love runs smoothly enough, and they are an attractive couple throughout the tale.

The schism in the church gives Mr. Crockett opportunity for much quiet fun-Making, 'which, however, never degenerates into low comedy, but is always tempered with a certain atmosphere of reverence. There is reason to believe that although Ihe Lilac Sunbonnet" is so lately published it was written before The Raiders." There are many evidences of the prentice hand in the style. The story opens with Ralph Pedenthe rising hope of his father and "The Marrow Kirk "asking his way of an exceeding handsome maid," Jess Kissock by name. Ralph was going to epend a time of final preparatory study, before entering upon the Marrow Kirk ministry, with his father's friend and only fellow-minister, the Rev.

Allan Welsh. Fate, however, in the shape of Winsome Charteris. comes between him and his books, and forces him to think that the proper study of young mankind is woman. By accident he sees Winsome at a rural Scotch washing by the riverside. and the die is cast.

Who could resist such charms as these? Fair hair, crisping and tendriling over her brow. swept back in loose and flossy circlets till caught close behind her head by a tiny ribbon of bluethen. again escaping. it went scattering and wavering over her shoulders wonderingly, like nothing on earth but Winsome Charteris' hair. It was small wonder that the local poets grew gray before their time in trying to find a rhyme for a substantive which for the first time, they had applied to a male-en'.

hair. For the rest, a face rather oval than long a nose. which the schoolmaster declared was statuesque (used in a good sense, he explained to the villaze folk, who could never be brou7ht to see the difference between a statue and an idolthe second commandment being of literal interpretation along the Loch (irannoch side), and eyes which, emulating the parish poet, we can only describe as like two blue waves when they rise just far enough to catch a sparkle of light on their crests. (D. Appleton tft Co.) 134 State, 68 70 Madison.

OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS. and man other prominent musicians. One Price. One Profit. Plain Figures.

Easy Payments. W. KIMBALL Wabash Near Jackson St. umbu slicer EXPANDED rIETAL STEEL PLASTERILIS 0 p. weathering all kinds of financial disaster.

The Populists assert that i merely one more chain that binds tne lcountry to the wealth of the land. The bankers of insist that it will render the currency flexible, and thus in periods where great sums of money are in demand on short notice prevent stringencies that are threaten. mg to the whole fabric of the Nation's monetary system. The ever resourceful Pop. ulist meets this argument by tne ingenious assertion that since the banks find the business of furnishing the currency of the country such a lucrative source of revenue, the national government might engage in the business to the profit of the masses.

Many copies of the report on the Baltimore conference are in circulation in Omaha and are in demand. WhiSs in conference a few days since with THR TRIBUNE representative a prominent Omaha banker said the present financial plan of the Government of the United States was an exceedingly dangerous thing, and the wonder to him was that it had not been destroyed by some gigantic upheaval years ago. But to his mind the crisis of last year was a fair sample of what was extremely 'liable to occur in the United States during any period of general depression. Be was in New York when the dangerous symptoms of approaching disaster began to be manifested. A broker had in his presence remarked to a member of the New York exchange that a panic would occur next day if there was not more Money offered to those demanding funds on proper security.

To prevent the disaster he saw a few of the bankers in a few hours sesure $7,000,000 with which to flood the exchange. Then when the tune came when the Clearing-House Association was compelled to issue certifie. cates the banker said they realized more than ever the necessity for a flexible currency that could have been fallen back upon in a moment of that kind. As it was, he was satisfied that the clearing house plan saved the country from the greatest panic in history. The Balt'more plan he thought well calculated to answer the purpose.

For years the same plan has worked well in Canada and in it he could see nothing but good for the American system of finance. The Commercial National Bank sent a representative to the Baltimore meetingCashier Alfred Millard. The President of the bank, C. IV. Lyman, a financier of more than national reputation is an enthusiastic advocate of the plan.

In talking of the plan he said he had not received any communication from Controller Eckels on the subject of the proposed message of the President touching finances but understood that Cleveland was to consult the American bankers before completing his draft. In discussing the Baldr more plan Mr. Lyman said: I believe the principle underlying the Baltimore currency plan to be eminently sound in that it tends to give elasticity to our currency. It is now admitted that had the law in 1893 possessed such a pro. vision its benefit would have been inestimable.

A full discussion of the matter will no doubt discover additions to the proposed plan, and the fol. lowing suggestions may be pertinent First, should not the 'guarantee fund' provided in Sec. 0 be invested in government bonds, thus adding to itself continuously? Second, ehould not Sec. 2 provide a minimum as well as a maximum of circulation? Third, in the event of a bank desiring to take out circulation in excess of 50 per cent of its capital, should not au examination be had before such request is complied with? Fourth, I would eliminate the phrase 'emergency no bank caring to admit that an emergency has arisen in its affairs. '4 That the government would be amply secured by the proposed plan seems beyond question, and whatever secures it and additionally secures the individual holder of the currency.

That a change in the present law must soon be made is obvious. The committee havmg In charge the drafting of a bill will be able. I believe, with the assistance and suggestions they will receive from all classes of business-men from all parts of our country, to present a bill that will be just and advantageous to the people as well as to the banks." J. N. Cornish, President of the National Bank of Commerce, said: The Baltimore currency plan appears to be the best one suggested by any of the financial societies.

It will, if carried into effect, create a safe and elastic currency that will 'relieve the banks as well as the people in the time of a panic, and arrest the distress so frequently felt. caused by the scarcity of money to meet the necessary commercial demands. I therefore recommend that the national banking act be so amended as to harmonize with the Baltimore plan and abrogate the present system." President Frank Murphy of the Merchants' National Bank was very much inclined to favor the plan. His bank was expect-trig some sort of communication from the Washington authorities on the forthcomnig message of the President, but he is not in a position to speak of the matter in detail. While he indorsed the Baltimore plan in general he could not be specific.

since he had not had time to read the report of the conference in detail. While there were probably some chapters that might be improved upon he was inclined to think the Western bankers approved of the plan adopted at the conference at Baltimore. The Power of an Endless Life," by the Rev. Thomas C. Hall.

pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago (A. C. McClurg is a hale volume of nine sermons that reveal the preacher as a man of spiritual insight and great clearness of thought. There is little theological statement in the sermons, so little, indeed. that they give no indication of the denominational affiliations of the writer.

But there is in them that practical ethical impulse which has become a distinguishing note of present-day Christianity, and which is doing so much to rub off the sharp angles of the traditional theologies. In the preface Mr. Hall declares that the sermons were only published through the kind insistence of friends. But they will be read with satisfaction by many outside the preacher's circle of friendsSeto York Tribune. -Th )1PERHEID5IECit PLUG TOBACCO.

GP- FLAVOR ---Anw -slk efo 4 0 A I 1 14 N.7,2,,,,,x,e la i it 4 Every house that is plastered on wood lath is a fire trap, and consequently a death trap. The interior wood work under the drying errects of artificial heat becomes as inflamabls as tinder, needing only a spark to Mash the lire from cellar to roof. Expanded Metal Steel Lath when corered with its coating of mortal 4the best known the proof material) basures safety and cta but little in exceYs of wood. It prevents cracking and telling or plaster. Adopted for all U.

S. (iovernment Buildings end specified by ieadiag Architects for hotels, Theaters. Asylrums, Hospitals, School Houses and Residences. Write for catalogue of lathing. fencing.

etc. NORTHWESTERN EXPANDED METAL 400 E. 26tu gt, CHICACO should, but whatever love might have existed Call Boon turned to hate, and poison instead of blood seemed to course through the boy's veins. young Mirabeau confessed that women were the only occupation of his youth, and tses "licentiousness became my second nature," as be put it. Yet this did not prevent him from taking a more serious 'view of life and putting his talents to some time.

He was a keen, independent and original thinker and became one of the foremost founders of the the new school of national economists. Al. teoegh a born aristocrat, with a horror of the leveling heresies of democracy, he was humanitarian and possessed of an inborn aversion to all sham and hollow pretense. When be became older, and married and raised a family. the fact that this moralist, the arraigner of despotism.

was a moral monstrosity and himself a despot, was made painfully apparent. Although he loved his mother be vilified his wife and steeled his heart against the supplications of his son, yet in spite of his savage cruelties he avers that he never wronged a human being in his life. He calls upon his daughter to curse her mother, and avers his incontestable right to be sole and irresponsible judge in matters in which be is a vitally interested party. Such are the contradictions in the character of this remarkable man. But enough of the shadows.

Mirabeau was pi inestimable value to France, although it is with a kind of reluctance and a somewhat apologetic, air that France glories in him. That be Is not yet understood is acknowledged, those who have attempted to be his biographers admitting this. He held an ab-1 solutely unique position in the Assembly and was practically a party in himself. Ile was a statesman in the fullest sense of the word, but being essentially a practical one his character is not appreciated by the French. When accused of being a "mad-dog upon whom no one could bestow the slightest cohfidence be retorted: "That is an excellent reason to elect me to the States-General), for despotism and priv- ileges will die of my bite." His entire program was bitter and unrelenting, was against tee privileged classes and against privtleges, and be never extended it beyond them.

But it was enough. These two evils had wrought inestimable harm to France. To the extent of his own program he was the very impersonation of the tierce and implacable revolutionary spirit, although per-locally very monarchical. He even took Money from the Kmg. NVhat he wanted was I revolution that went only so far in order to result in a 'reform, and it was necessaey to thoroughly understand how far in the people of the country the capacity for reform went.

No one better understood the people than Mirabeau, and it was as patent to him as the sun on a bright day that their capacity for reform was as limited as the need of it was boundless. Ile knew that whatever broke loose from the past in such a way as completely to cut the ligaments of historical continuity went necessarily too far. His idea was as far as possible to adapt things to the revolution and avoid abruptness of transition. Mirabeau, progressive as he was, did not hesitate to adapt himself to the times. He acted as an adviser to the crown, but, while taking money from the King, be did not for-wear the political convictions he publicly professed.

In this age, with our standards of political morality, one would deem Mira-beau merely a political mercenary, but judging him by the standard of his times he was not such a culprit after all. He looked at ends, not means. Every one took money from the King; why should not be? Unfortunately Mira-beau was unscrupulous in money matters: when he needed money he got it, an did not scruple at methods. King Louis VI. paid Mirabeau's debts, amounting to and per month for current expenses.

Ile also gave La March four promissory notes for each, to be Fad after the close of the National Assembly, provided Mirabeau was true to the promises made the King. Just how far Mirabeau "sold out" to Louis his enemies could not say. lie was convinced that the restoration of the legitimate authority of the King was the first need of Franco and the only means to save her, yet he was proloundly averse to a counter-revolution. The sight of constantly growing anarchy was a horror to him. He gave the King and Quean no promises that would indicate any justification or adherence to absolutism but merely advocated a government in France with a chief invested with the necessary power to apply all the public force to the exeeution of the law.

In fact, to use his own words, he was the defender of the monarchical power regulated by the laws and the apostle of liberty guaranteed by the monarchical power." His program never involved the revivification of the ancien The end of Mirabeau ceme Estranged from the radicals and forced out of the Jacobin club. of which he had been twice President, by his defense of the royal family, he could only predict the disasters he knew were inevitable without poseessing the means to avert them. Distrusted by the Queen, Marie Antoinette, who never could be in. cluced to give hen her confidence, oppoted by those with whom he had so long been astociated, attacked by his former intimates and forced into conflicts in the at the best were but drawn battles for lika and not to be classed as victories, he suddenly disappeared from the arena, etrieken with an illuese which caused his death II a few days. 11L3 body was interred in the Pandieon, only to be removed to give place to that of the infamous Marat, and no one LOW knows Nhere his ashes lie.

Perhaps the have scattered them. It is perhaps as he iMght have wished. He preceded his royal master but two years, that dull King whose lassive resignetion, which he mistook for courage, caused him to be the builder of his own scaffold. (The French Revolution. Tested by MI- ratteau's Career.

Twelve lectures on the history of the French Revolution. delivered at Lowell institute, Poston, Mass. By 1-1. von Ho)st. In two volumes, Chicago: Callaghan Co.) 111 4 Consumers ofthewinobtaccollo are wifiln3 to pas a tittle more than' the price charsed for lite ordinat5 trade tobaccos, will find this brand 5uperiorig all others BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

It Ile A DVttlAY' PILLS. The Ascent or Life, Mr. Stinson Jarvis' book, "The Ascent of Life," is one of a certain psychological interest, though it will hardly take rank as a highly scientific production. It consists mainly of the republication of a series of articles from the Arena on a class of apparent facts or 'phenomena that involve a considerable amount of human credulity in their acceptance, and for some of which it does not seem this author adapts the best and most reasonable explanation. He accepts clairvoyance as an unailestionable fact," rejects suggestion as the true explanation of the curious facts of hypnotism.

and seems to be in the fullest sense a believer in veridical apparitions and dreams. In his ideas of evolution Mr. Stinson is not a Darwinian; natural selection is ignored as the chief cause of variation, which he considers to be the effect of maternal impression upon the offspring. The paternal is of small importance apparentiy, though he probably would altogether ignore it. There is a great amount of popular belief and some little medical faith in this origin of variations, and it has biblical (Old Testament) authority in its favor, but it has not been brought forward so prominently and exclusively as the causal factor in the development of species and varieties in recent scientific treatises on the subject.

Aside from the above mentioned lack of due scientific estimation of a rather dubious class of phenomena, the book calls for no especially unfavorable criticism. It is well written and many general readers will probably agree with the author'. views here noticed. (The Ascent of Life; or, Psychic Laws and Forces in Nature. By Stinson Jarvis.

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Purely vegetable, co ntaining no suer cury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. OBSERVE when only 30 years old, he was appointed Presiding Elder of the St. Paul district. At the end of his term he visited Europe and on his return was reappointed to the First Methodist Church of St. Paul.

Bremks Away from Metbodiatn. In 1888, having become dissatisfied with orthodoxy and with the trammels of the discipline, Dr. Smith withdrew from the Methodist Church and, in company with thirty of his admirers, founded the People's Church of St. Paul. This move created a decided sensation at the time.

void the new church was mercilessly satirized in the public prints. It was independ'ent and democratic in its organization, and did its work through two committees of ten members aach, one in charge of ito secular and the other of its spiritual affairs. Any one might become a member on assenting to the Apostles' Creed, acknowledging Jesus Christ as the Savior, and cove-minting to practice the precepts of Christ, and labor for the upbuilding of the People's Church. The new church had its first home in the Grand Opera-House, where large congregations assembled to hear Dr. Smith's sermons.

It was speedily demonstrated that the movement was a succese, and steps were taken for building a permanent place of worship. The result was the erection of the People's Church on Pleasant avenue at a cost of $130.000, which was first occupied on Palm Sunday, 1889. This building is something of a novelty and received an eirtended notice in Schuyler's .4 Architecture of America," where it is described as possessing great practical merit, but as intentionally departing from the conventional church forms expressive of the orthodox theology. Work of the New Church. The prosperity of the People's Church in its new home has been phenomenal.

Its membership quickly incteased to 600. It has organized five Sunday-schools and opened 1 two chapels in the suburbs. It has organized a German congregation and provided it with a minister. Sewing and housekeeping classes are held for girls and carpentery and drawing classes for boys. To provide additional room for this work a building was rented for a perish house.

where a Salvage Bureau" was established, from which food and clothing are dispensed to the poor at nominal rates. This year the parish house was turned over exclusively to the women and a men's parish house was established in the business part of the city, where there is a coffee hoese, a gymnasium, a reading room, and parlors. In addition to all theee charitable expenditures, and in spite of the hard times, the People's Church last fall lifted a debt of $45,000 from its house of worship. Dr. Smith has been a member of the Minnesota State Board of Corrections and Charities for the last seven years, and a lecturer on sociology in the University of Minnesota for the last three years.

He has made several trips to Europe, and on each occasion has devoted himself to the study of sociological questions, his last visit being made exclusivety for that purpose. As one sestet of his interest in these subjects. he organized the Associated Charities of St. Paul. As might be expected from this record, his theology is decidedly liberal, and is little more than a practical application of the maxims of Christ to daily life, An Interesting Dr.

Smitb4a not a polished orator. He is rather an earnest. interesting, convincing, and inspiring speaker. He is ready and resourceful, and the interest of his congregations never flags. He deals little in dogma and religious mysticism, end when be mentions doctrine subjects it to the test of common sense.

He attracts both the spiritual and secular classes, and is especially strong with business-men. He has sharp critics as well as warm friends, but he enjoys universal popularity, and his acceptance of the pastorate of the Central Church, if such a thing should happen, would be regarded as an irreparable loss to the People's Church and to the City of St. Paul. The pulpit of the Central Church will be occupied tomorrow week by the Rev: Dr. Reed Stuart of Detroit.

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Burning in the A few doses of RADWAY'S PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Price 23 cts. per bog- Sold by all druggists. RADWAY P. O.

Box 305, IsT Ar Books Received. PAreasa. By Julian Gordon. J. B.

Lippincott company. liners. A Novel. By Fletcher Battershall. Dodd, Mead Co.

A FARM IN FAIRYLAND. By Laurence Housman. Dodd, Mead Co. WHERE HONOR LEADS. By Lynda Palmer.

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Mead Co. Me STUDY FIRE. By Hamilton Wright Second series. Dodd, Mead Co. HALCYON DAYS TN THE DREAM CITY.

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HIDDEN DEPTHS. A Tale for the Times. By F. M. F.

Skeane. Rand, McNally Co. Paper. THE ODES OF HORACE. Translated Into English.

By W. E. Gladstone. Charles Scribner 's Sons. BARON KINATOS.

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a DURAND. By John Durand. With illustrations. Charles Scribner) Sons. THREESCORE AND TEN YEARS.

1820-1590. Recollection. By W. J. Linton.

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A BACHELOR MAID. By Mrs. Burton Harrison. With illustrations by Irving R. Wiles.

The Century company. OLIVIA. A Story for Girls. By Mrs. Molesworth.

With eight illustrations by R. Barnes. J. B. Lippincott company.

AN INTRODUCTION To THE STUDY OF ENGLISH FICTION. By William Edward Simonds. Boston: D. C. Heath Co.

STRAUB'S NEW MODEL FOB SINGING CLASSES, ETC. By S. W. Straub. Published by S.

W. Straub A Chicago. DAY DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES. By Fred Grant Young. Groveland, Hermitage Publishing Company.

Paper. Tits EDUCATION OF THE GREEK PEOPLE. And Its Influence on Civilization. By Thomas Davidson. D.

Appleton Co. THE GOLDEN FAIRY BOOK. Stories by Many Authors, With 110 illustrations by H. R. Mil-Ian D.

Appleton Co. NINETTE. A Redwoods Idyll. By John Vance Cheney. Illustrated by M.

Isabelle Morrison, San Francisco: William Doxey.1 Mtn's. A Tale of Dartmoor.f!By S. Baring-Gould. Illustrated by Franki Mild. New York: B.

F. Fenno Co. Paper, MORE 'MEMORIES. Being Thoughts About England Spoken in America. By the Very Rev.

S. Reynolds Hole. Macmillan Co. LIFE OF CHARLES LORING BRACE. Chiefly Told in His Own Letters.

Edited by his daughters. With portraits. Charles Scribner's Sons. FIRST IN THE FIELD. A Story of New South Wales By George Manville Fenn.

Illustrated by W. Rainey. R. I. Dodd, Mead Co.

2EDOEOLo0Y. A Treatise on Generative Life. By Sydney Barrington Elliot, M. D. Chicago: Mrs.

A. M. Scott, No. 022 Woman's Temple, EDWIN BOOTII. Recollections by His Daughter Edwina Booth Grosomenn.

And Letters to Her and to His Friends. The Century company. STORMS "mom THE DIARY OF A DOCTOR. By L. T.

Meade and Clifford Halifax, M. D. Illus. trated by A. Pears.

J. B. Lippincott company. Sealskins and Other Fur Garments. SPECIAL REDUCTION SALE.

CATALOGUE FREE. MILTON AND GLADSTONE. Wolf Periorat Flu Co. L. J.

WOLF, Proprietor, "Everything Comes to Him Who Waits" Nor, but advertises in The Tribune now. 225-227 Midway Between Jackson and Adams-st. De CIS10011 About Building. Mr. T.

M. Clark, Fellow of the American Institute of collected and brought together in readable shape a large rumber of the leading legal decisions on matters relating to building and contracts between owners, architects, and contractors. Although a high English Legal authority, Sir Fitzjames Stephen, has said that it required a special education to be able to read judicial decisions cannot say that the author of this work has not intelligently discussed his subject, though but a layman. Ho modestly admits in his preface that "the limRations I his legal learning have obliged him to quote, wherever possible, the actual words of Judges, in statements of the law," but he has made these quotations comprehensive and has also made them comprehensible to unprofeslional readers, even more, It is probable, than would have been done by most regular legal For this reason it will probably be a very usetul book to a large clam; of readers. including architects, house-owners, builders, and whoever has to do with construction or investment in buildings.

On account of the number of cases citeu and the scarcity of legal literature on this particular subject it may also be consulted by lawyers, though it can hardly be said to have been written for them. The author has had legal assistance in its preparation, and he gives forms of contracts caretudy drawn no as models, one of which at least is new and appears in this volume for tne first time. (Architect, Owner, and Builder Before the Law. A Summary of American and English Decisions on the Principal Questions Reiating to Building and the Employment of Architects, with About SOO References. Including Also Practical Suggestions in-Regard to the Drawing of Building Contracts.

and Forms of Contract Suited to Various Circumstances. By T. M. Clark, Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. New York: Macmillan tit Co.) NOBODY Not a regular subscriber can be sure of The British Statesman at 85 Challenges the Comparison sie Trauslatore of Borneo.

London Daily News: This is Milton'e rendering of Horace, Book Ode v. (Quis gracilis rime): What slender youth. bedewed with liquid odors, Courts thee on roses in some pleasant cave, Pyrrha? For whom binds't thou In wreaths thy golden hair, Plain in thy neatness? 0 how oft shall he On faith and changed gods complain, and seas Rough with black winds, and storms Unwonted shall admire I Who now enjoys thee credulous, all gold, Who always vacant, always amiable Hopes thee, of flattering gales Unmindful. Hapless they To whom thou untried seem'st fair. Me, in my vow'd Picture, the sacred wall declares to have hung My clank and dropping weeds To the stern god of sea.

Mr. Gladstone thus renders these beautiful lines: What scented stripling, Pyrrha, woos thee now In pleasant grotto, all with roses fair? For whom those auburn tresses thou With simple care? Full oft shall he thine altered faith bewail. His altered gods: and his gaze Shall watch the waters darkening to the gale In wild amaze: Who now believing gloats on golden charms; Who hopes thee ever void. and ever kind; Nor knows thy changeful heart, nor the alarms Of changeful wind. For me, let Neptune's temple-wall declare How safe-escaped, in votive offering.

My dripping garments own, suspended there. Him Ocean-King. 541 BAKER BLANKET Longest wearing bores blanket made. 6' Have worn 1 years. Hundrwisof 111111-.

teritiguonials to this Milani. Made both with and without surningles. 1.43ok for Horse stamped AY111111 A Soars. PHILADA. The Sunday Tribune Unless the paper is ordered in advance.

There are left over copies for TO.THE YOUZIG FACE I Pozzoni's Complexion Powder gives fresher I charms, to the old renewed youth. Try It. NOBODY. A GOOD THING! ORDER IT NOW. Next' Sunday's Tribune No Desire for a Change.

He came and stood beside the typewriter. am greatly interested in you." be said tenderly, Will be my wife?" The girl wrote four words before replying. she remarked finally, "I prefer to have you interested in Tribume. BUT IF YOU WANT A GOOD THING! WINTER RESORTS. zgz POINT COMPORT" Pennoyer Sanitarium KENOSHA.

Chicago and Milwaukee). An Ideal Invalid's Hotel with luxurious Commodations and hoznellite comforts. lietit and Healt h. boecially recommended as a Winter Bolton tor those who may not be to go South, or who may teouiro the advantages of a perfectly goloped healtninstaute. Iteaut Ifni Architecture.

The building is nevr Modern, and thoroughly sanitary, is heeled with hot water. has a solarium large recreation room, elevator, etc. Healthful" LocallonThs climate le tine; artesian well upoly the house with water of rare purity and valuable mineral properties. FOT thustrated booklet address NELSON. E.

PE YE K. M. Manager. Insane an objectionable Masea ere not 'ORDER IT NOW. An Editor's Prophecy.

The late John Walter of the London Times visited this country in 1806, and of course wrote a boolc of his impressions. He saw Chicago before the great tire, and when it was far less wonderful and impoitunt than it has bine become, but the growing and lusty city made a deep impression, and he wrote that it was one which he lett with regret, and would Se long and gratefully rememner." Following is the remarkable paragraph this conservative man wrote of this country: America must be seen to be understood; and those who visit it will probably return with mixed feetuagsof pride, at the thought that the great work ot civilization which is rapidly over-spreading that continent is being carried on by men of our own race and language; and of grave reflection, I will not say of sorrow, at the thought that half a century hence America wilt be he most powerful country on the face of the earth, and that. as all greatness is relative, our own star must decline. A wartica Highest HonorsWorld's Fair, Gold MedalMidwinter Fair. Dividing 1.7p the Sovereigns are a very small part of wealth.

There are only, in Gresit Britain. 228 of them for every nominal 10.000. While the United Kingdom alone produces a year. the whole world, in the same time. yields gold and silver to the amount of 138,000.000 only.

We, for our share. have only-one new sovereign for every nominal L'325 of now riche. It is clear, then. that wealth and money are not interchangeable terms. Whosoever would realize the difference may do so by imagining himself asocial reformer heading a company of 500 progressive thinkers in the enterprise of nationalizing.

among themselves, a mansion which. with all it contains, is worth Each of the 500 should. if the advanced expectation were correct. become richer to the extent of 1.:400. but, the expectation is illusionary, and the results of the measure would be The company might find wine enough to keep them in good cheer for a week.

food enough to give thirty of them a day's meals, and bedclothes for thirty virtuous progressive conches. Those things, however. wonld account for only a small portion of the 200,000. Where would the bulk of that great sum be? An exhaustive search might lead to the finding of in coin of the realm; but at least would be represented by pictures, books, and other works of art, furniture. china.

guns. and fishing rods. Now, if the nationalization of wealth were going on in the same manner all over the land those things would be practically valueless. The reformer who, havmg expeeted k.400. found himself passesE.ed as his share of the hooty with a broth basin or a po rtreit of a Durch Burgomaster.

would feel himself poorly used; ind the live humanitarian philosophers whose share was a beta cabinet in joint stock would be in even more evil plight. Ali the 500 would discover that affairs are not as they seem, and that it would have baan well if. before quitting the old order to make things new, the communal had been quite sure that it understood too deceitfulness of riches. The Quarterly Review. THE WELL KNOWN ISLAND OF BERMUDA.

DR. STRONG'S SANITARIUM Mr. Gladstone's Ilorace. Translators of Horace may be divided Into two categories, Mose who give a free renderilag of the classical Roman and those pork is marked by strict fidelity. Mr.

Gladstone belongs to the latter class. Hie En-Is compact and scholarly rather than poetical. It is as difficult to put 'Horace into batwfactory Engish as It would be to put lenLyson intoj'rench or German, the and picturesqueness of epithets being nearty inimitable. Because Mr. Gladstone's tranlIntion appears at this time is no Proof that it was made since his retirement from politics.

From internal one would infer that the work has been done at different moments during his busy eireer. Mr. Gladstone has had many predezelitorf in Horace, but his work favorably compare with that of the best ol them. It is characterized by terseness and Followtng is his rendering of Ode to stice The iuNt Man, in his purpose strong. No 'fledging crowd can bend to wrong.

The forceful tvrent's brow and word, Rude Auster, tickle Adria'. lord, Ilis firm.set spirit cannot move, or the great hand of thundering Jove. On him all fearless would be burled 14'1 ruins of a cruthhimg world. nere is his translation of the fiftieth ode of '4e $evoad book, in which there seems to be rebuke to those who would inclose land to the people had a traditional right: a.intins were poor, but yet they mads ervutly rich. No measuring then rod the colonnade Akot rd the cool North for private men.

T1r)comrtion turf, that grow at large, an cient laws bado ail respect, tie at the public charge vb atone oar towns and temples are decked. Ilt.bbOk or parodies calied The Hawarden by C. L. Graves, has just come out t411.or.don, It is clever and scholarly in its anked more than one take-off Is highly Here is the well-known Persicos ,.1 as Mr. Gladstone renders it: OZ rith Persian gear, I hate it, the wreaths with limebark bound.

I. reached In forty-eight hours from New York by the elegant steamers of the Quebec S. S. sailing weekly. The Ilittlitti013 of these isiand south of the Gulf Stream render.

FROST' UNKNOWN, and the porous coral formation PREVENTS MALARIA. Highest class passenger steamers ars every ton days for Santa Cruz and the princi pat West India Islands, affording a eharming tropical trip at a cost of about four dollars per day. For all particulars apply to ARTHUR AHERN. Sec'y, Quebec. Canada.

or A. E. OLT rERBBIDGB Agents. 89 Broadway. New York.

THOS. COOK, and SOBS. 234 S. Clark-st Chittage ARADOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.

A pooulsr resort for health, roe; change. or reeves, tion all the year- Elevator. electric balm. 'tease heat. UJ' parlor and promenade on the root Of rooms with baths- Dry.

tonic air. Saratoga wirer. and winter sports; IMAnsage.eioctrietty all baths and health applzantwai new Turittak and Boaslas bat. ond tor illustrated eiroular. co-'1.

Ay 1 I 1 r4 9 kvit. I )) 3 'vlp ellEArfl fu i I THOMASVILLE, GA. PINEY WOODS HOTEL OPENS DEC. 15, 1894. For circulars, address WILLIAM E.

DVIES, Thomasville, Ga. DYE HOUSE; OYEINC AND CLEANING ladle and gentlemen garments; lbo household goods of every variety Write for instruction pampa It and price list. floods railed for and delivered, 01 BECEIrED AND RETURNED BY NAM OR EXPRESS AUGUSTSCHWARZ, TpLcare20. CHIGACO Mats Officereafl Work, 11.50-145S Moots SU South $ide Office Wet Side Office 128 Dearborn lit. 506 W.

actsullsou au AT THE GHOST HOUR. Heyse's Ghost fales. Translated by Frances A. Van Sentford. With decorations lay Alice C.

Morse. Dodd. Mead Co. VILLIERS DE LISLE ADM. His Life and Works.

From the French of Vicomte Robert Ponta vice de Ilenssey. By Lady Mary L.oyd. Dodd. Mead Co. MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALE.

Selected and edit. ed by Joseph Jacobs. Illustrated by John D. Batten. Londont D.

Nutt. New York: P. Putnam's Sons. EARLY PUBLIC LIFE OF SVILIJAM EWART GLAD-STONE. lour Time Prime Minister.

By Alfred F. Bobbins. With 3 three portraits. Dodd, Mead Co. A SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL TREATISE ON AMERICAN FOOTBALL.

For Schools and Colleges. By A. Alonzo Stagg and Henry L. Will, jams. D.

Appleton Co. THE DESERTS OP SOUTHERN FRANCE. An Introduction to the Limestone and Chalk Plateaux of Aquitaine. By S. Baring Gould.

M. A. Illustrated by S. Hutton and 1. D.

3edford. In two vols. Dodd. Mead Co. THE ART OF Tnomts Hamer.

By Lionel Johnson. With a l'ortrait Etched from Life by William Strang. And a Bibliography by John Lane. London: Elkin Mathews and John Lane. New York: Dodd, Mead Co.

Hall Caine on Novelist Mr. Hall Caine, the Menx novelist, in an address early this dionth before the Philo-, sophical Institution of Edinburg eald some "true things," as Audrey would call them. He said this, for instance, In discussing Moral Responsibility in the Novel and the Drama It is a frightening thought that the morality of a man's book is exactly his owu morality. This is most of all true Au imaginative literature. Imagination is a chemical which, let a man pour it on any plate whatsoever.

it is bare to develop the teatimes of his own face. In investigating the question, In what does responsibility consist?" Ur. Caine lays it down. first. that it consists in the choice of subject.

And here the public taste steps in to set limits to the novelist and the oramatist 01 the novelist there is only one thing the public demands, and that is human nature. But there are subjects it forbids, suoh as all unwholesome and unnatural passions and the imaginative treatment of sacred personages. Short of these it welcomes anything religious quevtioust political questions, or even EDUCATIONAL. EDUCATIONAL. Kemper Hall Kemper Hal19 te.cirre 1tfm 14 4,1 I I Davenport.

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the leading Clubs and the homes, Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder holds its supremacy. 40 Years the Standard. FIN eNT5AlrillrEpT) tl iti The Standard 31 wit .13 Maintained. Minneapolis Tribune: The necessity of issuing bonds is to bo deplored; but bond issues are better than bankruptcy.

Above all. the Etandard of money must be maintained, and alder the circumstances it can only be maintained by keeping up the gold reserve with the proceeds of the sale of gold bonds. A market could undoubtedly be found for still another $50.000,000 of bonds, and for after that, as the credit of the conntry is still good, owing to the recent Republican victories. Send 110, or $3 30 for a IP upero box of candy by express. perpatd east of Den.

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