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Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana • Page 18

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Logansport, Indiana
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18
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FnnnpUr and pannaneni- all In lvBc for WOOD'S A30PeM Sold In Ltigiinsport, by Ben FlBher. DAILY PHABOST TH RSDAY. FEB 2. 1893 nis fellow citizens a 355 such recipes, By Onr Own leave. During 1W3 this country gained more riew ro MS will, require aanexation, ihan $11,000,000 over 1691 in the amount i being fae the Sandwich Islands its exports to the Spanish American i erases, it why we republics, Should consult Great Britain on the sub- ject.

England hits taken posiession of desire it. there ie no resson said, in. France, an epitaph committee, and the members the same absolutely refused to allow the condition indicated in the dead man's will to be carried oat. The for theneph- A GLORIOUS TRUTH. E.NJ.

T. LOOTHAI.V. JOHS W. BABSES ZDITOHS ASD PBOPKIETOBB. TEBMS OF SCTBSCRIPTIOK.

DAU.Y EDITION. Per Annum payable in advance 5 Month, pnyable to currier Pur Week, paynble to carrier XDITIOH. oopjf, one yaar One copy ,5 One copy throe Offlrlal Paper of County. I Entered K-oond oliisn maiter nt toe Postofflce. February 8th.

1S88. WmiKT baa gone duwn. goes lhat way. but it usually a majority of the inem- ar.a senate have "views." islands in all parts of the sea wiiboot so i they Tefnsec to adjourn as "a mark i deceased is that, it bemg ex- much as saying "by your leavs" to their res to memory of ex-FTresident press stated they cannot touch the for- and hhout her in-, passed a res olu- to o.her intended powers. Hon favor oi the World fair SenW-Lonto Standard.

HawBii is nearer to than to aaj Other eitensive coaniry. We have a western coast line of over four thousand miles, whose commerce And Woman Will Profoundly Appreciate It. A Vista of Hope Opened up for Women Si. Cmn Teach -School Talk Politic. Jjccture on Twenty Kearney, boasts of a genius in the person of Miss ilary A.

Rlpley, who can talk on more topics than any other woman in the United States. And she and Happl-! csca interestingly on everyone of them too. She to use tho phrase of a down east woman who heard her lec- tion in favor of keejim, ar open on Sunday. LiTerpoo i has torrowed the American nly ideao an elevated railroad and now has Hawaii but with China and past her £rst jj. on tracks upon stilts, passing Hawaii, is rapidly increasing, making it the whole line of her docks and ship- deairabic for us to own cotliug stations pillg interesting point about Liv- ou thia route.

erpool's elevated road is that the motive We shall maintain our proper interests, i is eleciricity taken from a steel take advantage of legitimate opportuni- con auctor along the rails. lies Rt our pleasure, and let Eu lanrl Si iy Bhe will. If Hawaii is ncccpled. it Will be without asking leave of any bur opean nation. Aln CI.EVELAKD'B cabinet will contain business men, but they will not be of ihe sort who make business of raising corruption funds in exchange for cabinet portfolios.

IT Paymaster Hulford, by the grace of Pay matter Harrison. Jr we get Hawaii securely annexed, Yolcsno iniursnce will become a national indasiry. THE flrs: thing the ciiy c-juncil should do, in behalf of what is juat and liKht, is to repeal the ordinance forbid dinK the company to protect iio own property. Life and property arc cndHngerud by nn ordinance thnt forbids the gus company from protecting own properly Irotn destruction. OP course the report of the special committee ia received with delight by ihe Journal, which bin bet-n burning through bored mixers, and, by its own ccnfeeuion.

is paying nothiug for it, uno during the period of greatest scarcity, was robbing other people did pay, by burning flambeaux for in violation of law. who heat THE nt ihu heud of thu new natural compiuiy, are Ruanuitys thai tbe matter in in the bunds of ublc and iufiueut'uil persons If they have BU- cured sufficient new gas territory, HB is asserted, there aecmt to be room in this city for another company, aud we hope the promoters will receive encouragement sufflcifDt to make the cnterprisu success. THE population of thcawieB. according the census of 1S90. ranged from 6 000,000 in New York to 47,000 iu Nevada.

The formtr will continue to Cftin and the latter to lose, according 10 all appear ances, yet each of them has au equal number of senutors This is au anomaly in a repreientativK system of govern- nunt. At this nioajent Illinois, with two senatora. i'our- teen other states, with a total population of about three and a half millions, have tweniy-elghl senators. Has not that sort of misrepresentation been carried far Tribune. Enough for tlie Prencnt.

It doubtful whether it is the part o( wisdom for the United States to acquire more territory. As now constituted, this is a great country. The, of territory now compnsioK the United Slates is very great and, in many ways, tlio roost favored of earih It is in the variety of produrtions, in climate, iu the fcrti iiy of soil, in i he character of its If mnro territory is acquired, it should be from the north of us country the climate of which is not so agreeable as our own, but land that is very valuable ia a commercial poiut of vtew.becauso of jts arid of timber lands and its undeveloped mines. Our own country is yet but meagerly populated. It is capable of maintaining million more people then now it- habit it.

It iahot much beyond tbe Srst The Future Telescope. The great telescope of the future will be a a reflector. Further, there is no limit to its size that can apparently be set at the present flay. These are conclusions which Mr. Alvan Clark, the leading lensmaker of the world, has reached, according to his paper in The.

North American Review. Telescopes consist of two essential eyeglass and the object glass. The object glass now consists of two of crown glass, the other of flint glass. This is to correct the aberrations of light and color which result from the use of a single convex lens. Tho object glass of the telescope is only following the general tendency to great size that is manifest everywhere in our time, from a city business building to a steamship.

In 1S25 the greatest telescope of the time had an object glass that was 91 inches across. It was said then that no telescope could ever have a larger one. But the gradual increase in size went on, till two years ago the telescope of tho Lick observatory was put in place with an object glass of 3 feet aperture. Furthermore, Mr. Clark has now in his workshop at Cambridge "two remarkably fine disks of 40 inches diameter" ready for tho final polishing, The glasses must of course increase in thickness accordingly, and it might be supposed they would absorb so much of the light that passes through as to dim tho image.

But this is not the case. The two lenses of an object glass feet across would only require, both together, a thickness of 0 laches, and the glass is so clear that the light is not appreciably diminished. It is certain that with these mighty telescopes tho 20th century holds in store achievements for astronomers no less wonderful than those awaiting other investigators. Fish Exhibit at the World's Fair. It is acknowledged in Europe that the United States leads the world in the science and art of pisciculture.

The United States fish commission is preparing an exhibit for the Columbian fair that will still further open the eyes of Europe to what wo can do. If you cannot take in everything at tlie exposition, omit something else, but be suro and see the fish commission's exhibit. Part of the live fish display will be arranged to In prehistoric times the art was under- stood of hardening copper till it would take an edge like a knife, but it was lost, and men have been trying for centuries to rediscover it. Edison said once that! if copper wiro could be hardened it would be as easy to telephone across the Atlantic as from New York to Brooklyn. Hardened copper wire would be better than anything now in use for all electrical operations.

It would not rust like iron. Well, a "Swede, Peter Johnson, who has been working at the problem WOMAN'S WORLD IN PARAGRAPHS. Tlio Dairy as an Occupation for TVoMJ.en. That lively and agjrressive gtate, Indiana, furnishes many ishining examples of guccessf ul business women. In the older states tlie dairy industry on a large scale has now drifted mostly into the hands of men and stock companies.

But in Indiana we have several signal examples of what vromen can do not only in dairy- Iso in the rearing of beef cat- Meredith's herd of Shorthorns In southeastern Indiana is one of the noblest in the country. Mrs. Laura D. Worley, of Elletsville, is so successful a breeder of butter and so successful a butter maker besides that it Facts In Regard to It Given by Some WeH Known People. All women will be deeply inlersu'd in the following true story told by Mrs.

Amos V. Dell, who resides at 235 Han- 'an awful smart -woman." i jiiss Riplev was for many years a i teacher in the" Buffalo high school. Her summers only are spent at Kearney. As soon as the" lecture season begins she packs her satchel and starts out to tour it, all over the Portland, to Portland, and from St. Ail- was at one time proposed by some gaT- eleven years, claims at last that he has rediscovered the lost art of the without any middleman, and- lant western men to make her chief of the live stock department of the "World's fair.

As a matter of fact, she was appointed one of the jurors of award on dairy products. She sells gilt edged butter directly to give tho effect that you are standing at the bottom of the sea looking up through multitude of fishes at home in their native waters. There, too, will be tho fish hatcheries, which will show nil the world how our skilled fish culturists hatch in small ponds millions of shad, codfish, mackerel, and distribute tho young fry to the various waters in which fishermen can catch them when they are full grown. This part of the work has been so effectual that already the annual catch of shad has perceptibly increased in the Delaware. The methods of deep sea dredging will also be amply illustrated.

The fish that can be distributed iu tho fresh waters of the country constitute perhaps those iu which tha larger portion of our people ore diredily for instance, men and tho American aborigines. A piece of his hardened copper plate half an inch thick turned and flattened a bullet fired with sixty grains of powder at 120 paces. A number of capitalists believe in Johnson's discovery sufficiently to have formed a stock company at Chicago, putting $300,000 into it, Tho Pope's Jubilee This Year. The pilgrimages to Borne in honor of Pope Leo began with the first month of i 1893, aad they will continue at intervals until their close in December. The pope had a golden jubilee five years ago.

That was to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his assumption of the priesthood. Tbe present golden jubilee will celebrate the 50th anniversary of his consecration as a bishop. It will be seen that his advancement was rapid. Deputations from different countries will -visit Borne at intervals during the jubilee year. Many events of the greatest importance ia Roman church ceremonials have had and will have place.

One was the creation of a number of cardinals. Another is the issuance of an encyclical early in the year which, it is said, will deal especially 'with the questions of patriotism and state education. It is said that the pope wishes to impress particularly on the people of the United States that love of country is part of the Catholic church's teaching, and that his holiness believes in the thorough Americanization of Catholic children in this country. Most novel to the Protestant mind, however, will be tho ceremony of '-beatification." This amounts to a solemn ceremonial proclamation that the spirits of certain eminently devout and saintly persons who have departed this life are released from tho place of waiting souls and have entered the state of heavenly bliss. Medicine as a Career.

Dr. John S. Billings tells us in The Forum that no career at the present day oilers to a young man such inducements for success as the medical profession. is adding to her bank account year by year Another progressive Indiana dairy woman is Mrs. Mary C.

Alexander, who read a paper before the Indiana State Dairy association on "Dairying as a Successful Occupation for Women." Mrs. Alexander began dairying first with one cow and the most primitive appliances. She took up the' butter making branch of the work. Now she has many cows, a "brick milkhouss with modern conveniences" and a warm barn, for her ows. It is interesting to know that her wn fine, strong armed daughters do the milking, and they have not fovmd it hard work for a woman.

Mrs. Alexander believes there is something in a woman's gentle touch with a cow and in- -n-oinan's nice sense of cleanliness and ler keen sight, smell and taste that par- icularly adapts her to successful dairy- jn" Mrs. Alexander is quite right. She at present enlarging her own facilities and going into the business on a larger cale. There is not the drudgery at- ached to butter making and the care of milk that there used to-be.

Calf and do; power can be utilized with the new if churn, and the cream separator or the creamer relieves a woman- of the care a large number of heavy milk pans. As to pet'aniraals, there is nothing one car jecome more attached to than to a hen! if beautiful cows. Rev. Florence Kollock, who. Europe last summer, is studying Assyrian arcbssology and Egyptology the British museum.

She will undoubtedly come on the fact in the course of her investigations that in the most ancient times in Egypt women had such richts and such a commanding power and influence as they have never enjoyed any country, civilized or uncivilized, since. How they lost their power is a Ion" story and most interesting one. In brief they lost much of it through their cock Jersey City Heights, X. gustine to Montreal. I snnerea from complete prostration.

and exhaustion of the nerves and physi- cal system," she said, "1 had womb 4is- ease terribly, and leucorrhcea so bad that 1 I could hardly walk. 1 was tired and weak all tbe time, and hardly cared whether I lived or died. 1 took Or. Greene's Xerrura blood and nerve and now feel aa if I bad a new life. no longer have that tired feeling, be has stopped, do my work without getting tired.

This wonderful medicine has done me more good ban aoytnins else 1 have ever taken. Why I tad taken one dose on gong to bed, and in she roorninc I woke up feeling like another woman, it seemed stranRC for me to know wbat to get up without leeling tired. ittgoi Of development No one can form teont and These will receive conception of its ureatness a ceo- SuryhencB. No people in the world are 10 progressive and enterprising as eur own. the oppressed ssd down-trodden of other landa are flocking to our shorCi to better their con-, dition.

Centuries may intervene, however, before more territory will be needed to accommodate the rapidly increasing population. When occasion requires it. more territory be obtained That lime hss not yet come their due share ol" attention. It is to By success, however, he assures us he does not mean the means of amassing great wealth. This profession will give to a man a comfortable competency for himself and family; no more perhaps But it'will afford opportunity for a good degree of happiness, for the exercise the highest mental faculties and for being helpful to more people than the prac titioner in any other profession can be a rich field of investigatim lies before the scientifically inclined doc tor.

Wo know, for instance, says Dr Billings, that malaria is due to a minut animal organism that passes "throng' several stages of development, some which occur in the human "body. Bu nobody has as yet ever found this organ ism outside the human body. It ma perhaps get into the human blood from the bite of a mosquito, but nobody knows The medical scientist who shall bun the malarial bacillus home to his nativ presumed, too, that the commission will lair be tlie Benefactor of the race feel that 1 cannot praise Dr. Greene's Absolutely that is, to everything except" dirt Anythino-that can be at all can't bfe be hurt by it. But that's only one of its merits.

If that were all, Pearline would be bet-ter tharisoap. Add to its doing no harm, that it saves it, by doing away with the rub, rub, rub that wears things out; that it saves labor. time and yet costs no more. than common you wonder, not that millions of women do use Pearline, but that there arc any who don't. Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you "dus TTT' js as TOod as "or "the same as IT'S JjC vVCtl Pearline is never peddled; if you an be honest JAMES PYLE, HEAPS OF TURKEY AND PIE.

Nervura blood and nerve remedy enough. Herstory is more than r-qualled by of Mrs. J.B.P«iEt. of 2789 Washington St-, Boston. Mass.

She says: "Four years ago I was in a position of complete physicaUnd nervous prostration-had but little appetite, with severe iadicestion, stomach distended with gas, constipation, palpitation of the heart, sleepiness, pain in the back of the neck and base of the brain and despondent thai life was a burden. so nervous must struggle till they the task now be- own fault. get it back, and that is fore women. Much of women's trouble comes to them because of a sort of intellectual laziness. It is easier to trust a man- anybody, father, brother or husband- to transact business, easier to let men run city government and easier to let ministers make church rules, even by no means neglect the opportunity to show the farmers of the country how each one of them may havo his own fishpond and draw food supply from it without endangering the health of his family from malaria- So will he who traces out through its various forms the vegetable bacillus of typhoid fever, and he who shall find out the function of each of the nerve centers in the brain and throughout the nervous system: ft little change in certain cells of the cortical gray, a chaiise which requires tlic ase of tho microscope to determine, ilie orator tlio jndKC those rules relegate women to a shame- fullv subordinate position, than to rocse up and find out things and act for there- selves.

Women of this land have no to whine when men cheat them out of all their property, when their sons and daughters are ruined because of bad city government and public vice, or when pompous doctors of divinity msnlt them by preaching at them the propriety of i-norance and subjection for -the Christian woman. Women have the remedy for every oue of these evils in their own hands. In the series of scathing papers about American schools which Dr. J. M.

Rice has beeu contributing to The Forum there is one city whose primary system his unqualified approval. That is Indianapolis. He finds that here the true ideii of education is comprehended and put in to operation with shin ing results. It is with modest pride record the fact that this is owing to woman, Miss Croppy, assistant super intendent "of the Indianapolis schools. Miss Cropsy has long been connected with the Indianapolis schools She did not consider that if she worked just as the principal told her to do and then drew her monthly wage that her duty was done and herself cleared of responsibility until some man came alons and married her.

Miss Cropsy IUPLET. Her new lecture on "Columbus" is very interesting one and gives hints on discovery which those who are making arctic expeditions would do well to heed. Among Hiss Kipley's multitude of lecture topics there are talks upon the "Venus of Milo," "Heredity," "Household Service" and "Scientific Temperance." As soon as the lecturer begins to speak she captivates her audience, for she is eloquent to a degree. Her finely formed head and wealth of short hair add weight and impressiveness to her words. AUGUSTA PBESOOTT.

of the 1 Fewt on the FBI of tlie "Quit yci pushin behin derel" "Bust in, th'door!" "Shove up de grub 1" "Aw, lee a feller in!" "Lemme at de foedl" "Soupl" "Turkey!" "San'whichersI" "Meat 'a p'tate!" "Pie!" "Wow!" "Whoop! Hooray!" Two hundred newsboys of all races, colors and ages shoved, hustled, bhoutod, whistled and whooped in the upper room ot tho Nttwsboyis' Lodging house at 9 Duano street From below appetizing odors arose. The doors that separated the crowd from Mr. Albert Favorite, of Arkansas City, Kan. -wishes to give our reader! benefit of experience with colds. says: "I contracted a cold early tart sprier that settled on my longs, and had recovered from it when I caofht.

sDOlber that hunt on all summer and left me with fkhacking cough which thouRbt 1 never would get rid of, I bad used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy somr fourteen yean ago with much and concluded to try When I had got through with one bottle my aie" "newsboys' dinner creaked under had left me, and have not suffered the vigorous efforts of-the 3i with a cough orcoldsince. I have tnVdTning room and took possession of the i well of it." 50 cer I benches that flanked the well supplied ta- j. Kccslinc. Druggist. bles.

Then up rose a dull and continuous sound such as is made when a housewifo chops up celery in a wooden dish. Itnrose Taste-of "Royal Ruby Fort from SOO pairs of. jaws working- with vigor an(J you know why we call it and speed. Occasionally there was an inter- neld up to the mption and an appeal to Superintendent Royal. A glass nem up show why wo call it Wine" "Hoy, mister, dis mug hero's swipin roo rcW8rc i or an botlle of tliis wine found piol 1 seen Mm chuckin it down "is neck fiyc oWi Qr any way gdullcr- w'ile I wasn't lookin." ow cud yer see me when yerwasn't look- MRS A.VUS V.

a result of this condition, oiber eaknesses peculiar to my sex. fell upon ie until I was utterly wretched. "After much medical treatment and onatant failure. I was induced to try Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, it was in a faint-hearted way and with little hope, but I soon began to leep better, my digestion improved, tl pain in the head became less severe snd gradually gained strength until I felt as I had been extricated from a pit of abject darkness and dispair and bad em- er fi ed into the sunlight.

Dr. Greene'a Nervura blood and nerve remsdy me I Very many of my friends to have recommended the remedy, can attest to similiar results in their own cases Greene's Nervura blood and nerve a wonderful medicine 'Roman's saved remedy ia truly and might well be called the This ffreat remedy is purely vegetable and harmless and doctors recommend because they know it is such a wonderful cui3r disease and because it is the prescription and discovery of the noted Shyrid.n.:Dr.Greene, of 35 W. 14th New York, the successful! specialist in curing all forms of nervous and chronic diseasea.The doctor cau be consulted by all, free of charge, personally or by "Vo'suEering woman should be without this sure remedy. GEORGE WAS RATTLED. Mathematical Girl from Eonton Too Much for Him.

He entered the room hurriedly. The young woman standing by the open are greeted him with smile. He strode up to her in frenzied haste. She was frightened, for he had never acted so before. The smile faded from her face and she grew pale.

"Hist!" he said between his shut teeth. "What is it, dear?" she asked tremulously. He glanced over his shoulder furtively; he peered into tha corners of the rreat drawing room like a hunted animal. 'Are we alone?" he whispered hoarse- Then it was the woman's character in that fair young girl grew to its full maturity in an instant. Ali her life she had lived in Boston, yet no crucial test had ever come to her as this had done.

So, dear, we not," she answered simply, yet firmly. The young man started nervously and gazed about him. He was from Chicago and had been in many hairbreadth escapes. Who's here?" he questioned. You are," she replied.

'I know; I know," he said impatiently. "But who else?" "I am," she whispered low. "No one else?" "No He laughed harshly. "Why do you mock me?" he asked. "We are alone." "We are not," she insisted.

"Oh, George," and her voice took on a tender, pleading tone, "can't you see we are not alone?" He looked at her bewildered. "No, I cannot," he said. The girl led him out into the light. "George," she asked slowly, "are yon here alone?" "No," he replied, "you are with me." 'Am I here alone?" I am with you." G-eorge," she esclaimed triumphantly, "how is it possible when neither of us is alone that both of us are tlone? Is not the integer the same as its fractional parts? Is the sum of two pigs and two pigs four beans?" and in the swirl of this Bostonian logic George for- Howc in?" An examination proved tho truth of the accusation, and the pie was returned amid tho sobs of the despoiler. "Don't make mo git out, mister.

I on'y tuk it fer me starvin an fambly." "How many starvin wifcnfamblys yer got?" demanded tho boy on the other sido of the speaker, extracting two turkey bones smothered in mashed potato and a piece of ham from the youngster's pocket "I'll give yer ft clump in th 1 car yer go feedm yer starvin vrifcnfambly on my grub." This was doubly strong evidence, and tho offender bad to go, which he did, having previously stuffed his mouth full of everything within reach, with the noble resolvo to get all he could out the dinner anyway. When, the first 200 had devastated the tables a new supply was furnished, and more hoys were let in. About GOO in all werefcd. It took 700 pounds of turkey, i barrels each of potatoes and turnips, 600 assorted pics, 280 pounds of ham and 60 gallons of tea to satisfy them. All this was the gift of Mr.

William M. Fleiss of 47 Broadway, who gives a dinner to the boys every year. It was 3 o'clock when the last lot of caters arose with sighs of repletion, and filed out to smoke cigarettes in the ball. This process finished, they scattered to their homes, eady to get up in tho morning and sturdily am" their own dinners throughout another ear by bootblackmg and the sale of "ex- rys" until nest winter brings them another free York Sun. m-and in sickness and con- uted.

Uispmnd in T8 esC eDCe, or where strcnguiemng cordial is required; As WILL be learned from the report of the special committee of the council, gas rates are much higher in the Ohio cities visited than they are How wcro they made higher? The report tells The KiiSCiitnpanifS supplying the cities mi-krd for higher rates, and the city councils granted the request of the Lottanspon gas company has' not for an increase in rates. Until this winter we have had plenty of gas furoishfd al lower rates than most cities supplied by pipe lines, and the has not beea eictlled in any city outside the belt. It hss been even better than the service of some cities within the belt. Tbe council has not been asked to change tha schedule' rate for supplying gas and when the council recently advertised for complaints during the co.ld weather, leas than one hundred consom- en expressed complaint either in the paid or of the quantity of gag supplied. The comes to the coaelu- that the gai company ii going to in- rttei because aotne citieain Ohio have permitted to increase Loftansport company has not asked an iocruat in.ratea.

It conld not obtain it if it were to Mk it. Rates-can not be, hi consent ot the; 4., thought over her work and studied the David Dudley Field lays before tho corticll i gray, a dumps -Inch what boots on public his plan of settling the labor rftto acnm- Son conld teach her she learned besides. question. It is, in brief, that the stnta an lle pru dcnt mnn of business, the af- the course of years she evolved a a law making business cor- foctionatc husband nnd father, die model citi- system of primary education of her own'and was fortunate enough to i of a dcWmtion whicu her work appreciated by the school I unchecked mil make him a hopeless paralytic board field for being useful to the race. But it xuvrtn There is no danger.

The aver! while to note what Dr. Billings considers masculine animal is not such a the propel preparation for entering on success that women should this profession which eniibles one to be want to i jitaw him- so helpful to his fellow man. It is mdi- Maine nwds attention, judging of the value of their buildings, money, machinery, into small Field himself suggests $5 as the amount of one share, so that their workmen can become purchasers if some of the stock, He believes this would reconcile the in- i terests of capital and labor in such way that there would be no more trouble, Mr. however, that laws wnor.nt to little without a public opinion to back them. If he and the other apostles of reform would go on a mission of educating both employers and employed up to the point where each is willing to give the othe: fair chaace, then Ms law compelling cor- pomtions to cut up their stock into small parcels might stand some chance of en- forcement.

Jlyyouns friend whose attention I wish to direct 10 raeuicino as a career 'ill Have spent therefore, he is ready to work, fce "he entered the nniversitr. It can be done" for less, bat this is a fair average estimate. Heirs' Predlcamcnt- Heirs to property sometimes experience Mi considerable difficulty in entering into pos- a mile in broad daylight and for a dis- session sl 5 fcaSin tance of eight miles on a clear night, un 1 ca tiere has already been a The flashes are to appear and re- of jjagsuon in France is far- appear by clockworlr, and the invention nishai the will of aParisian restaurant T-OfiTC Magnesium powder blown through a bellows upon a benzine lamp makes a flash of light that can be saen more than to penetrate a fog. It comes from a German. The magnesium powder makes which can penetrate farther than whits light.

In one of the lighthouses on Staten Island this invention is in use, quest a condition was affixed, out of which has arisen all the trouble. The testator stipulated thai instead of to. he read on to attach, tg tha whicn resting place a culinary pe Maine needs some from a letter in The Woman's Journal In that state a dead father has more control over a child than a living mother, and it is, moreover, lawful for a man to leave his wife a pauper at his death. Nevertheless in his last message the governor devoted a third of his space to the protection of game and said never a word about the protection of women- It was a newspaper woman, after all, that brilliant and industrious girl, Lida i Rose ilcCabe, was the means of opening 10 women the post graduate course in" moral philosophy at St Francis Xaviers Roman Catholic college in. 5ew Tork city.

Advice of Tne Review of Reviews ui women, best way for women to enter politics is not to Seep-up'agitation for woman suffrage, but to lake a lively hand in the political battle as it actually wages." This is what English women are doing. got why he had so hurriedly entered the Free Press. ODDS AND ENDS. Turpentine is good lor lockjaw. A sister's office is a noble and gentle one.

The father of Dr. Rush was a farm laborer. The friend of everybody is nobody's friend. Tho knitting machine was invented by Hooton in 1775. In 36 years South Australia has had 40 administrations.

Love says there is some good in the most disagreeable people. Command large fields, but cultivate small One hour of righteousness is worth more than TO years of prayers. The grand problem of. aerial navigation is yet awaiting a solution. The famous cathedral at Vienna is now lighted with electric arc lights.

In ISO" Davy decomposed potash and dis- potassium, soon after soda. On the very day the first church was started the devil produced a hypocrite. Tbe firiit envelope ever made is said to be in the possession of the London museum. The homeliest man iu the lower house of congress is "William F. Parrett of Indiana.

Millions of butterflies, it is claimed, are eaten every year by tbe Australian aborigines. It is sa id that green vegetables retain their color when cooked ia an uncovered vessel. The funny that the little folks say bedtime would doubtless fill a very large volume. The Mississippi is shallower than it has beenhefore since 1S36 and is almost- completely frozen over opposite St. Louis.

A number of understood to be in favor of having an officuil verbatim report of the proceedings of parliament It wfll never cease to be a wonder to the average man how any fellow conld ever fall in love with his (the average man s) sister. Ctethe 10th of December, banis England stopped payment. The Bank of England's credit was saved by the timely issue of £Tnotes. In 10 or 12 generations the available coai rforkTJSK and" Needle ISook. A convenient workbag and needle book combined is made of a 13-inch square of figured china silk, 1 yards ol inch ribbon, some bite of flannel and two cards.

Cover the cards with the sflk after laying some perfumec wadding on one side. Fasten together by over casting the sides Sew, the silk together, leaving i down. open four inches at one end, split- ipposite ride the same distance Hem and run a case for the ribbons to close it. Gather the other end (two rows) and overcast it to the outer edges of the needle Ixxfc. This mil throw the book into the bag, concealing it entirely when closed and tied -with tb ribbons attached midway the book.

gh'e IVM Certain. recommended by duggists and pbsyiciws. Be sure you get "Royal Ruby." Don't let ita- pose on you with something "just good," but go to Johnstons, and get the genuine. Sold only in boniest price, Bottled by Royal Wioe Co. Sold by Johnston Bros druggists- Joseph V.

Dory, of WarsfW, 111., trouVed with rheumatism tried number of different remedies, but none of them seemed to do him good but finally hi- Rot hold of one speedily cured him. He was much pleased with it, and Ml sure that others slmiliirly afflicted would like to know the remedy was that cured him. He for the benefit of the public it called Chnmberlsiu'8 Pain For sale by F. Keesline. Druggist.

THE J. B. L. Catarrh medicine is also the most CCOD- omical CouRh Cure in the market. A few small doses will curi- the most OD- slinatc coupb.

For sale by or at office, 400-411, 4th street. She Sat on tittle Balloon" 'Mother Goose' for can't but he'll like tho pictures. "Tin can't blow it very hard, because he's got a sore throat. "Candy dog lor little her icart. "Toy The red balloon began to bob frantically about at the very end of its perverse cot- string and had to be tied to a seat arm.

The speaker had entered the Northwest-1 em depot fairly bristling with Christmas jnndles. One by one they wcro subjected a little inquisitive poke and a muttered sentence regarding their disposal. Three seats in the center ol tbe room had been selected. After two of them were filled with little corded piles of bundles the woman deposited herself in the third, folded aer hands and looked placid. She was an dividual of large dimensions, and a tat, pleased smile rollicked over her countenance.

The red balloon, securely tied, bumped frivolously about- and playfully tapped the woman's left eye. She didn't like such undue familiarity and promptly shortened the string. The. red balloon struggled and bumped-maliciously about, but it couldn't get away. Presently the woman wanted a drink.

By the time she cameback the red balloon had formulated plans for revenge. The woman turned slowly around and proceeded to sit down. The balloon bumped and struggled and sat down first. There was a terrific explosion. The woman's smile oi.Christmas joy faded away, and she jumped several feet into the air with a scries of yells that would have delighted the heart of a Comanclie Indwn.

The 'balloon was an utter wreck. The crowd which gathered around laughed Are there not tuefc in. enough to form a cabinet? The mystery been solved st last; Our teeth no longer need decay, All troubles of the month sre past, By SOZODOKT they're swept away: And yonng and old.may smile secure With and teeth so bright and pure. Mr. editor of the Bloomfield, Iowa, Farmer, says: "i CBD recommend Chambeilain'B COORD Remedy to all sufferers with colds and croup.

I have wed it in my family for pait two years and have found it the best 1 ever used for the purpose for which it intended. 50 cent for sale, by B. F. Keeslipg. Druggist.

The advertising of Hood'a Sareaparilla is always fully substantiated by endorae- ments, which in the financial world would be accepted without a moment's hesitation. For a general fwnily cathartic we con- fldenlly recommend Bood' A bale old man, Kr. Jai. Wilson, of Aliens Sprinei, 111, who in over 60 yeari of age, aays: "I have in my time tried a great many medicines, some of excellent quality; but never before did I find any that would so completely do all that if claimed for it- as Colic; Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It truly a wonderful medicine." For byB.

F. Kecsling, TIME TABLE Ln.fn.jeOX MOOmniojUJlon Buliois a) -wmnsiot. IXHJXJtSFOBI JLXV OHM. XAfT VOOTD. Aooommoditlon, Urn-re, iiWtoB.

a arrive, ex Bandar- Tbe Station- knnsulvanlaynes! toy Central I have a splendid story to teE you- I dont think I ever told it, to yon Before. it really a. good story? ii is. She you haven't tola to me Prettytrona tMfworild'beif--w Kfite TV-Srce. -tae-JEBgnsfi.

poet," was fields of Great Britain wfll be had no means of getting inf ormatioir be- huficher'B son and carrlTd steaks so his la- and ensring woods and forests are oeinS their husbands al home! Mr. Michael Higgins, Belcher Taylor Agricultural Tool CKcopee writes: "This company used ST. JACOBS OIL for years for their men cuts and and of Bradford a At f-t a ChtaMto a Crown Point am Smdford in -Ktoer wishiwrto Colnm Yandalia TIME TABLE. li.

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About Logansport Pharos-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
342,985
Years Available:
1890-2006