Illinois News Index

Downers Grove Reporter, 24 Dec 1896, p. 10

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I‘m-ma. mu Anny “other baa I, a very Inuuuvo mag. The III ll full 0! (ml our“ ad mu with. but low know how to II. M ”G mount them And my t 9.. Ion spirited hone. nun W1 Man! The flat II «In; In «climb 01 God '0 have plenty of m Icll mud. Ind puny of my nun-7. ma plenty 0! ml“ .3 0! have, elm-an ooldlory, . M '0 nod and In cunnâ€" W Into- ol Oodvâ€"tor luddn I. an III-flu “not! awn. "m 1! Nov York. 1! IA.- L.‘ m «ha (or God. It will not vb Ih' bout-Mm! 0! am- or II] mull! Inn-shoring W gun from tu port- 'usnut. but u gun. at ”41‘ d holy can" , can“ aid un- Iuo ”Ila ‘ ~III. at Mild oppoduou. b “I but). Ham. on cam f! I. II n nvlnl that Jim so: noun, a do .001 m an. In vort‘ . he kept the money ulcer-tho mum-y ueh deride: the ' city to defend luell, end ‘ WI. "You have not two men who can annexe horses. tn than-end uvnlrymen, nnd ‘ulve you I present of two thon- '¢$Vflrx hornet. You heve not In ,3!) oced city of Jerquem two men who cnn mount them. in um bridle control n hone." eh realized that It I. enter to houee tun lhllful riders, end I he make- the challenge a! the ‘1 will deliver then two thouund numbenhletomrldere nun America warn adv" t, Iflm‘ in Or»- ou nm now-ad Influx prm «whim! of Inmn an" My eonv roOhImL . DV‘M an tumou- WM mm! Inbnln: r Mam the in?“ him I I'm bean. of; h nun. vmrld’n «up: the no" ”no fifteen lh I. distribute m mum" . -Mvon on nov’ , . “meg In nu. tut I“ 0' nay lmvo nee that I kid" debut a > Wu ’Ir‘ut'nr-nd gym“ MM 'tult ntlon. n Gourd nun-um 011m. ' ' ' 168-0110! We to I?” or you and take my leave," he an "but lhlll be obliged if you will co md take me by the hand." When 0 Knox, who stood lamest, mroncn him, no drew him to hlm with a mad hnpulua. nnd kI-ed him, and not n s dlcr anon: than :11 went awny wit out n embrace tron- this man who 1; am cold and distant. After '1 min; tlm followed him In silence - which)! ‘fer'ry and aw him take b: ‘ , (0r his journey. gal-non any! point one an: form via? any non. Mly why thin «in tin m ban: on an. but was rod at ms nu; nutmn, Ind the «new: of one nprlngtlme w (in m of mother «mummy and tho' manna: nd’olnlng yarn almost ranch and: other In unbroken curve; in In In too much hurry about most Basin“ men In too much ’ \ M m speculation. gust rnln The cavalry mm: speed. When mice the reins are gathered Into the ”and: of the soldierly horsemm. and :m spun are struck into the flanks. in! heat the “flip!“ of the boots. "Velocity" In the word that delcrlbu um mavement â€"-â€" acceleration. momen- tumâ€"4nd what we want In gemng Into the kingdom of God I: calerlty. You a“ the years are so left, and the not; are so Witt, mad the day- no a. twin. um the hours are so lwm, ind gthqnlnutbl are so swift. we need to be 5‘1".- ror net of this [pm-opting and many do not get Mo haven a nu. Hm we no In an lust Sabbath 0! no you. Did you em haw n twelfth-mm 111mm to be' (and? 11:. mm or m mum math to thy Han also are opportnnltira all raady for those who would alter the kingdom of God. Chriat said that the kingdom ‘of heaven vaa to be taken by violence. By nae flash you may enter. Quicker than any eumstrian aver dulled through rastle unto you may pan into the pardon and hope at an Gavel. A. quick! at: run an thlnh "Yea“ or "No." azyqnicltiy as you can make a chuice quickly may you decide the unsung)! of eternal death". No one in ever slowly converted. He may hue been thinking about it torty years. lat not one In :h of progmsdid henna until the moment of ascent, the very ascend la vhich he said "I will." That instant decided all. Bring out the worst t'o thousand men in all the earth, and here are two thousand op- portunities of immediate and eternal nlntlon. “I will deliver thee two thousand horses. it than be able to act ridara upon them." Sundial II I do. in thI NIiionIl Capital. lei. no ll] ihli thl. we wait iI iho Boa-u Ind House of Mrs-oni- Iiina M the Supra-u Court in I m- iIoqui bloc-ins um will IhIho tho conduct with divine mercy. Thaw ro~ out]: can. ilio my hunk the neotdn 0! two Contra-ion! print-Milan, on the roll- of which were the was oi the lost eminent Bonnie" Ind Repro- IIIlIiiuI who then controlled tho dc.- iinlIw a! thin mobile-«ho on Coo- [n-loui grunt-noon“ II 1:51. Ind tho can in mu m ncord in In iho hum-writing 0! lb. phllIIthroplIt. Wllllnu 1 Dodge. um: I mint 0! 008m Than In now mm Clario- ‘uu Inn in tho NIiiooII iAIIIiIIun ‘thI "or More. Why will may not hold ionihor in I "Halon- moment which boron iha innnunnilon of the uni I’m-Maul. IhIll comm. cum in ch- henril of thin nation! M In" ll. MI. in" luv- ihw clonal". may have ill. "3811an. God mar m (not luflcicai! Who in Cali. II clrrlen will MIMI-II (N (hallolho warn-mating in “'1? hwi tho Ivnlu of ill. lui dmIdo of m- ount" ha lmilinied with nah I m~ lino-I Iplondor. Them In ille oppor- iIIlUcI m I nIuowIl Ind intimation- Ii chum. Ill bridled Ind fiddled. Where In ibc rldfln to mount (hell? ds and the hang at the they ride up and dow the Clear back in time. .37- led twenty thousand mountg in Bactriana. Josephus eaya when the Israelites escaped from pt, titty thousand cavalrymen rode hrough the parted Red Sea. Three hundred and eeventy~one years before Ghflst, Epentinondae headed his troops at full gallop. Alexander, on a horse that no other man could ride. led his mounted troops. Seven thousand horse- men decided the struggle at Arbele. Although saddles were not invented until the time ‘ at Constantine, and stirrupe were unknown until about four hundred and titty years after Christ, you hear the neixhlng and snorting o! war-charge" in the great- ‘eet battle: at the uses. Aunterllta. and Marengo. and Bolferino were decided by the cavalry. The mounted Coseache reinforced the Rue-tan anow stoma in the obliteration or the French army. Napoleon said it he had only had eut- iiclent cavalry at Bautaen and Lutun hie wars would have triumphantly endâ€" ed. ! do not wonder that the Duke of Wellington had his old war horse. Copenhagen, turned out in but vu- ture, and that the Duchess of Welling- ton wore a bracelet of Copenhagen's hair. Not one drop of my blood but tlnslee an I look at the arched neck and paving hoot and pantlnx nostril ot Job'a cavalry horae: "Hut thou clothed his neck with thunder? He paweth in the valley: he goeth on to meet the armed men. The quiver rattleth mlnat him. the [littering apear and the shield. He saith among the trumpets. Ha. ha; and he smelleth the battle afar oil‘, the thunder or the captains. and the ahoutlng.” ‘uvern to any good-bye. He could hardly speak for emotion; he could only lift his gins. and my: "With a heart full of love and gratitude I now an my in" '0! you, most devoutly wishing that your latter any: may be n W “I! happy :1 your for- m ones have been glorious and hon- onhie. ‘ ' ‘ lunnotcome’tomh or you and inks my lave," he said, “hut shall he obiiged'if ynn will come ma (hire me by the' hand." What: Gen. Knox, who stood nearest. approached him. he drew min to him with a sudden impulia. ma than him, and not n sol- dier unong then m vent am with- out I: embrace from this man who m. «and cold and distant. After an Mills tiny follows! him in silence to mam“ um um! at him take boat But no one deemed him hsrd or stem or IO much u I thought more or less, than hm when at the last the Brit- m. Ind withdrawn from New York and he stood amid his oflcen u Fraunces' u n my and how pmlen the com- nnnder-in-chiel hul seemed In sending the frank, accomplished. lovable gen- tleman to his dhcnceful death, grani- Ing him not even the ("or to be shot like 3 soldier. It med hard to learn the inflexible linen upon which that consistent mind worked, a if it had none to whoa! io tam It Iirl gm: weight from his hurt to In". a innocent boy so unhnrt from his {IA-dc. and he wrote almost tenderly (1: him in acquaintlng him with Na rem, but it wu of his sim- ple naturo to have sent the lul to the allows. nevenhelea. bad thing- con- tinued to stand as they were at first. He was lmmblo to check warmly and vindicate use Jug! rules of was. In were reminded. while the mar pended. of the hanging of Andre. Ar- noid's British cantedmte in treason, ‘l'lo ni-plidi' of Inflation. He lull seldom neon-d no stern. in- M. u in one incident of those trying Inc-nun. an Huper’u. An olicer oi tho America my Md been lelen in a chiral-h uni the Bull-h ind per- mitted o brnul coupon! of icy-lira. lancer one Coal. Lippineoit, to into him inn his prison in New York, and has lain in broad mlium on “I. bellm- our liddleiown. Wuhlnlon u once notified the Briliell commander that union ihe murderer- were delivered flu in in punished u Brill-h oflcer would he clam by Ioi. from moo. hie rrio- onen lo enter in Die Mead. uni. when rep-nun wu withheld, proceeded willmut bail-lion to com his three). Into ereculion. Tlu lot loll upon Capt. cwm Alcili. on coming youth of lam 19, the heir oi n [mi Basil-h lun- lly. Lady Aulli. the MIT. mother. did nor may alum. oi moving the French ‘ mun lo intervene to nu her In. and u last the congre- lineli counseled hi- roleue. ille Karma comm-non luv- iru mvowedl (in act of no border-- on in whose plwe lie wu in uuilor. um Wuhlnxlon him-ell luring nixed ‘ lo be directed wlu‘i be rhmld do. "Capt. Axum ln‘ n released." he wroia lo Vemnneerl'n answer in iln mu minister’- lnlemion. "l lure no right to ”more my particular merli for "i9 lenient manner in wild: this disagreeable nflalr bu terminated. Bui I beg you to believe, nir. tho! I most sincerely rejoice, not only be- come your immune lnienllom In milfled. but Manse (he (2er ac- ermle with the with" of his uni Chi-Io- Oh, my friends, if all right for the next world. the yesre csnnot nllop‘ past too rapidly. If it were possible «r the centuries to take the speed of. the years, and the years the speed of the'uys. end the days the speed of the houm they could do us no harm. The ehortemour life the longer our hesven. The sodser we get out of the perils of this life, I our work he done. the bet- ter. No nan ls safe till he is dead. Better me'l Qhan we have been wrecked, and st all axes. Lord gnu Lady Nspier were on horseback on a road in indie. Lord Napier suddenly said to Lady Nloier. "Ride on end fetch sealstance, and do not ask me why." She sped on and was soon out ‘ of eight. The feet was s user's eyes glared on them from the thicket. end he did not dare to tell her, last, sf- mghted. she fell in the danger snd perhaps lme her life. From all sides of us, on this mod of life. there no perils gluing on us. from tigers of temptation, and tigers of accident, and tints of death. and the sooner Ie get .out of the perils of this life the hater. Let 1397 tske the pisce of 1896, end 1898 the piece of 1897, and our soul will he landed where there shall he "nothing to hurt or destroy in all God's holy mount." "No lion shall be there, nor sny ravenous beset shell 30 up thereon. it sluil not he found there, but the redeemed shall walk there. And the rsnsomed of the Lord shell return, and come to Zion with songs, sud ever- lssun; Joy upon their hesds; they shell ohtstn toy snd glsdnul. retreat. They are am." loinc Ihend,‘ not. on an easy cantor, but It full run.) Other regiments hear; the command of “Halt!" and pitch their ten!- !or the night. The regiments oi the yearn; never hear the command 0! "Haiti“ and never pitch tent for the night. DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER. , [V'Zn‘iififn'fliufi $33“ ILLINOIS NEWSLETS no mum. antral omcm- deny m any ‘ Immun- boon In awn: ‘ no.3: m; ‘ m of the t . m L. R. Dodson, a restaurant keeper in Brighton Park, is emphatic in his state- ment that never again will he not the part of the good Samaritan. He has done so many times, and now he mourns the loss of 366. He ha a small restaurant a short distance from the Santa. Fe railroad depot. A week ago a rinsed and dirty boy with an honest (ace drunped from a freight train. went into Dodson-'3 restaurant and begged for methinx to eat. The boy told a tale of being an orphan, and gained the sympathy of Dodson. The latter took a liking to the boy and oilered him a home. providing he would mist in the restaurant. The boy, who gnvo mg name as John Wood and his age on is. agreed, and was soon inmlied. The longer the hay remained the more Dod- ‘ son liked him‘ and the more confidence he had in him. Finally he truned him with any amount oi money. Dodson figured he had made a proiluhle har- rin. The boy was in the habit of coping in the restaurant, and when out come to open up Christmas I: he found the doors already ,0“ and linen! t missing. also no. Recently the Weukegan naiiy Regis- ter printed what purported to he a long letter from u Juliet prison convict. It won said to have been picked up. and man; the choice lot of thievee' eiang in it we: n description of the location of some plunder which the convict had planted for safe keeping before he was arrested. The place is It Highwood. and the spot was located at e certain point west of the depot, where n hole hnd been dug at the foot of n his oak tree. As a result of the publleutioo oi the letter numerous fortune hunter: have been digging at the foot of the oak tree. at Highvmod, where these trees are quite numerous. Al yet no and is reported, and the letter may be I (the, although it bears ear-marks of truthfulneee, and is believed by many. I! the uporlmcuu now bolus mule In the shops 0! (he Cllrun (‘lty lull- vuy company In Incmsalnl. okrtrlc an will travel wm-om nolm. Ind the flair and clatter wlll be bottled up and carrled 0!! by file Introduction of I wooden nnd rubber truck. The con- tact have": dlflonnt parts of the VI- brunt maul he made or the much now In Me A roaring sound magnifier. A our of experimental (rich II now al- most completed. and In soon as they are fitted to 5 car they will be tested on one of (he tmlly llnos. Tho dulh nu in Chic-Io int wool: Among children iron pulmonary dio- ouu shown I marked lncrnn «or the proviom week. 'l'hn health amen! cachi- give u I moon (or this mail- llcn tho fuel that pinata permit iho rotunlcn io go out anon mum: clad during tho mild weather. Illd lb! colds. which an oflen (allowed by ml. ou wlmonnry «ii-anus. mull. light,- tour children under 1 your and tony- lour havoc-n l and 5 died. The ioinl «him "N m. Luz year for [he um real: ihore vars m. Attorney-General Maloney ha- ruled that It a county once.- elect ml. to and": In time. the county board mint In the vacancy The decision VIII ren- hrod on the appeal of the surveyor- ohct In Ford county. The wood-pull Ilhuucmnn of Okla, llllnou and Indium met an In- dlunpolh. Ind.. and turned III omn- Iullou will: the {moving afloat-I: Pie-Idem. Wm. Timbuktu, Lunatic: Iceman. Thomas Plum. North Vu- non. The solo object at lb. org-uln- uon I: to mum-In prlcn. By the terms 0! the will of ex-Mayor Travis Phllllpn of Aurora, tiled for pro- bate Monday. the city will get about ”0.000 to be used in the purchase of n public park. The city hospital is be- queathed $1.000. Jules Cuunn, 15 year: old. and lift. Ann Murphy, 58 year- old. 0! Ch!- 0180. Cloned from the home: of their child". In: wool: and were named without the motion or presence of their Ina-«om "mum. The "We of the Rev. Thoma Robertson mu. [tutor or the Mn! Presbyterian church of Bengal, and 311' Jewel Cup. daughter or 3 Toledo Illfl'chllfl. Ill ubbruod u the home of the brldo'n pm“ In Tole-o. A. H. Bowlln of Pecatonlcn. repre- sentlng himself an an advertising man, bled all of the Rockford doctors he could the other day. But he was arrest- ed and the doctors will dlsaect him In It is alleged that some Cairo alderâ€" men IIVOI‘ a curfew ordinance became their boys have seen them when they did not want to be seen. and then went home and told about iLâ€"Peorll Jour- nal. Gen. II. 3. Hamilton of Quincy i! mentioned as the next Illinois 0. A. R. department commander. ii‘rank Baumxartner or Peotone, hu discovered a sure cure for has cholera, and is using It In Iowa with great suc- Ian-I WI' lhpponlngl Canaan-“’80- ahl. Boflxlouo. Political, Orlmlnal. Obit-:17 and ulnamuuou- Event- lmln Every Section at flu sun. RECORD OF MINOR DOINGS OF THE WEEK. my 31 Th mlum of Angus G eleu, gone al mtncton; the A flu: in, uniting In! he had mistaken his on face in the looking glass for that of Robinson. He had no money and therefore he could not mpnir the damage, and Jones had khan arrested. Lawson "vs; at 2930 m atreoL~Chicho Tinaâ€"Kara“. to escape after receiving a severe jtrouncing. Lawson went into the bar- ‘ her shop to relate his grievances to Jones. The latter cautioned him he had better he on the look out for his victim. "He’ll come heel: and carve you to pieces." warned the barber. Just then. Lawson. still much excited. glanced over his shoulder. He wan sure he he- held the lace of his late antagonist. Lawson did not make s close scrutiny, but drove his list directly at the shining ebony face. Craehlng of glass brought him to his senses and Proprietor Jones to his side. The latter demanded that he pay for demolishing the mirror. ls min the colored man remonstrnted that t James Lawson of Chicago g. not m... whether his eyesight wns Ileried or he was snarling under the Nova of Jack Robinson when he mistook his own likeness, reflected In t mirror, for the conntennnce of hls antngonist. w when he crushed his that into the air. :ror in the barber shop at J. 1. Jones 2926 State street Christmas morning: [.41an is under arrest charged "a mnlicious mischief end disorderly con- duct. He is also nursing a badly he". ated right hand. Both Lawson end Robinson are colored. They attended n "cake walk" Christmas eve. The tonn- er had under his escort a young wom- an. but during the evening Robinson appropriated her. Robinson and the young woman carried off the prize. to the dineomflture of Lawson who upon meeting the former in front of Jones' barber shop demanded satisfaction. Robinson tried to explain but the lat- ter did not wait long for explanation but began a battle. Robinson managed ‘ The but inllum in Chicago develop ‘1 queer out. or nil-in. Tho lilinoil Truyt and anion lluk. the am in go under. wu bucking the Colon-t Electric nllrood. Other Chicago bush wen hacking the South Chicago Bloc- iric nilrood. The two companion wen riui- for buttons. The flom compo- tition llunily involved the books. It then Memo 3 can of which side could put up the moat oi the peoplo‘o dmiu The Cllumot would build A line in I 00min district. It- inch would inni- ly in down when the South Chicago Company would ponilol it. This port of competition might huo Proved good tor the public had um bank drool". of lb. public not been and to pm It luto cruel. It In: only a qua-Hon oi "me whom such method: would con. la the “(notion of the Unlml Slalo- hanll onmlnm A: several banks were bucking the floulh Chlnxo Com- Dlly lho nrnln on lholr mperlln mm wu very fight. The hour Manchu on the Nollonnl o! llllnoln finally snarled (he nuamlon ol (‘omw troll" him. He promptly culled I MN- 1'in «Hon Mama mmoml abom la hnklnx rlrrlen and (he fall- nm of the bunk lollowod. The Mock- lmlrlorl till, of course. make mod all '0’!" '0 “WU-Hora. Thorn can he no doubt but um sm'h molhods border ”only to crlmnallly. E. 8. nrryor I: (‘0. and Welmman Helnemnnn, nrlvate hankm. 'ho worn down In ”I. crash are unimpomm lallum. Drvy- or has born arm-led for rorelvlng rhy-i man: after the Iuolmmy or M5 511-, nlllmlon was know: u, Mm “9 pr.- .«vnl some pot-Inna of lhe nflnnders. I John ‘Pyle. confined in the Clay gcounty Juli, had no Christmas dinner. ‘None was oilered him for the reason that he has absolutely reiused any kind of nourishment [or the last seven- teen days. Neither will Pyle speak to anyone. and even his lawyer cannot set a word from him regarding his case. Hie actiona have Worried the prison of- flcinls, and doctors who haye been summoned to examine him have tailed to detect any signs of fever or other (linen. It was generally auppoeed that he acted than from some form of in- sanity. but ten days ago two doctora diagnosed his use thoroughly and pro- nounced him sane. Another commie-Ion was appointed to examine him again. and furnished a report that the man was almuiatinx insanity. while heln; perfectly nae. The jail oiliclal- do not want the man to tile in Jail, and, being powerleae to force him to take nouriahlnent. are in a quandary. A telegram from Detective O'Brien of New York City caused the arrest in Monmouth of 1 man known as W. C. Lamas, elsewhere known as Joseph Harris. Mex-mt, Unrlght, alias Win- rlght. He came to that city about three weeks ago, and has been engaged an a. furrier. Ho In badly wanted. and has been eluding capture for over a year. He Is charged with arson, and admits that he in the party wanted. Athorney A. H. Hall of St. Paul at- rived at Bloomington last week to cone sult and look after the Interests of his client. Clty Clerk Haney at that CRY. who In at Normal sick with rhenmuv tlsln. Hall declares that Haney ls lu- nocent or any wnngdolng In connecâ€" tion with the boodllng case. and that he will so to St. Paul without my legal process whatever just as soon as he is able to travel. The Animal Trap company Ind the Glob. Manufacturing company 0! Ab- Inldon are talking of removing to Quechua. Gold w». A new swindle tbs certain localitlel In I gold watch In watch, but a splat: gold one and a ' paqu for "r! ‘ ' The witch. m bl “ :t 81160 when; 01W in: than the"! WA] The eflort be"); made in non? ten! to persuade l Judge to rat appointment brings 13 mind u date toid of Baron Pollock and“ In Chief Baron Pollock. 0n and union someone hinted rout may broadly to the bum. on With A view. the person urged, to Mention of such a nimble uh. Allocnuhe saw thedrmof mtcr'n remarks the old man and with his grim. dry gnvlty and: "Wm You dance with me?" ' Nam-nu, the well wlahar m aghast at the chief inron' n strung. a- quest. but the latter who prided Mll- self particularly upon his sturdy log-z be!“ '0 am about um: mum ""0"! 800m his visitor main; cur-prised, "IO baron nipped up to hl‘ “d “”1 "WC“. If you won't an: with me, will you box '1“, no . Ind “squaring .f' had rm more visitor- ing after his health tiremenL~Westmin I r . the blue-glen hoepitoie for , . none of eiltnente, from e . v cone of typhoid iever. It ie‘ peredoxieel thet one would? i ' blue room for relief from but there in doubtleeeeonie -~' V w . in principle underlying its emote, m- it ie undoubtedly it feel. theta! "‘ went hee been very eillcient in ' oi nervoue disorder. The eunllxht cm in en old ee Diogenes. end the blue- Ilene remedy wee need ten yeere no. but the combination of two kinda of light ie entirely new. It hee been toned thet e rey from old Bel eennot be taken "in built." on it were. with each heneilciel eitecle on when it in divided up into perte end edntieietered in hineâ€"ooeted hotneopethie doeee. A greet tneny new dlecoveriee heve been niede of late reletivo to the proportion of euniight. of which the meet impor- teet ie exieteece ot the x-rey, which eeueed eo Ditch excitement et the time of ite denouentent. Ae ie well known. e rey of linht in exceedingly complex in ite nuke-up, hele; oompoeed of the eeven color ayeâ€"violet. indlp, blue. green. yellow. orenne end red. which ere vieible to the ordinery eyeetnhtâ€" beeldee et leeet two invieible reye. neinely. the X-rey of Dr. Roentgen e. the violet end of the epeetruie end the infrered rey dieeevered by Proi. Lenn- ley of- the Guitheooien inetitetioe. - Eech of thee invlelble reye hee e ene- eiilc cheuieel elect. which ie chidy neeiteeted in the prooeee oi note- | grephy. it ie. therefore, veeeonehle to infer thet eech of the dilereet oeier roy- ney heve ite own pet-olier olee. chemlcel or otherwiee. By e eeri- of uperitnente Dr. J. low-t Meyer d New Yorh. who hee been worliu on thin enbiect for nteey yeere. hee he. ehie to ehow thet certein oolor reye ere more enmioue in killing oer-e Ithen oihere. He he found thet the 1 blue, rod end oren‘e reye heve e pro- nounced chmicei elect upon ornate | teetter. end of three the hide ie the 1 etoet powerful. Now, then in. e! 1 conree. e certeln proportion of blue in every ray of light. but if the melt an be lnmeeed it ie neturel to eup- poee. that lie beneficiei electe will he meter. For tbie menu it wee ei Int believed thet en entirely blue ettloe- pherer‘epeeltinl literallyâ€"would he the best deeiroyer of xernte. By exper- Imcnt upon the living body. however. it wee found (bet the undiluted blue was too powerful end iinelly Dr. Bley- er hit upon the plan of elternetln; it with etreelte of white. Thle treeueent was at ilret need upon petiente el- ilmed wiih nervous dieeeeee end the effect produced was very benefleiel. But owing to lie known chenleei ef- fecie upon germs Dr. Bleyer tried it upon various infections dleeeeee end with such good reeulte thet he pro- poses. with the old of a stock unholy. which has been formed by metal prominent phyeiclens. to build e hee- pitel solely for tmurpoee. .‘v BLUE GLASS ILLS on:- THE FLESH TREAT] BY ‘COLOR mws. up: Ada-mod unnu- mm ohmâ€"nupma In: I. to no III“ ~13.“ lid In Goth... HE newest vau- cea for ills, 1mm: nary and otherwise. In the color bath. or treatment by associated It”. says the Washin- mn 3w. Fashion- lble women in New York are mun: "- and In!

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