Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Oct 1881, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

«'§mm « V' - A CITY HALLAB, BY TILL C All LETCH. %lliii, niiWwight. ma true, good ptwAir, twty wrt 'h^ you have Raid; Dot.vt ihinfe the** t«un unmanly--they're tbe first that I have i*bed. jBgtiljiy kind of ir'fwi andpoanded ana; I* * ' ; .v v> ' » > - . ^ heart and brain. AMI they would not be let (O of, and they'gare me extra pain. I'm .an ignorant day-worler--work for food and tag* and sieep-- And I Imi diy know the object of the life we slave tc --- ke<i>; j Ant I know wben days are cheery, or mj heart i* made of lead; J § Wow Borrow when I see it--and I know my «i»<m i» j . J dead. ! : ' •. . I *«. Bhe lent much to look at, joat a plxm.i. bit ol I cJay% _ . | Of ftesort of perished children yon are ever> j A*d linw1,/ie could break a life op you'd be alow tc understand; Bat the held t#u»«, Mr. Preacher, in that little with- y: m.r-. ered haqd. hundred yards to the right of a road leading from Chariotteville.Va,, to Mon- ticello, may be seen the grave of Jeffer­ son, in a little inclosure with thirty others. An obelisk nine feet high iparks the spot. The base has all been chipped fw j>*«t a laboring man, air, of that i away, and the monument looks rough, meaningless stone. " Born April 2, O. S., 1743, died July 4. 1826," is put npon the base. Another inscription has been almost entirely .obliterated. On the fly-leaf of an old account book, Jefferson wrote this : " Choose some unfrequented vale in the park, where is no sound to break the stiHness but. a brook that babbling winds among the woods--no mark of human shape that has been there, unless the skeleton of some poor wretch who sought that place out to despair and die in. Let it be among ancient and venerable oaks; in­ tersperse some gloomy evergreens. Ap- „ , _ r i p_ i propriate one-half to the use of my SwtivL'ILni^Tti. f'i. * ) family, the other to strangers, servants, by S«)™; humMl natore* * j etc. Let the exit look upon a small and distant part of the Blue Mountains." His wishes have been well carried out. The old family house was in ruins three years ago and tenanted by an old man who made a living by demanding a fee from visitors. MADISON. At Montpelier, four miles from Orange, Va., Madison is buried. The grave is in the center of a large level field, in a lot about 100 feet square, sur­ rounded by a brick wall. Oc the gate is a sign, " Madison, 1820." Four graves are here. Over .one of them rises a mound twenty feet high. A granite ob­ elisk bears the inscription: " Mftdiaon, born March 16, 1751." By its side is a smaller shaft of white marble,inscribed: " In memory of Dolly Payne, wife of James Madison, born May 20, 1768; died They will wander out for »~niethinfc-be it mod oi be It bad, And my heart with her had settled, and the girl wat all 1 had. '-Aire ere lots of pretty children, with t form and face more fine-- I>t their parents love and pet them--but this litik one was mine! "Store WWJ no one else to cling to wben we two were cut apart, Anait'ii rough--this ampntationof theaMxong arms' of the heart! * Tia coiiKoiHip, Mr. Preacher, and it may be as you've said-- God ioves children while they're living, and adopts them when they're dead; - But Jny brain won't quit contriving, do the v€rv beet I ear, ••mm 'twas not God's mercy took her, but the selflah- -- neau of man. Why, she lay here faint and gapping, moaning for a bit of air. Choked and strangled by the foul breath of the chimneys over there; for it climbed through every window, and it crept beneath the door, And 1 tried to bar against it, and she only choked the more. She would lie here with the old look that poor children somehow get; Bhe had learned to use her patience, and ehe did not cry or fret; But would lift her pale, pinched face up, full of early grief and care. And would whisper, " I am dying for a little breath of air." If she'd gone out with the zephyrs, twonldnt have seemed so hard to me, Or among the cool fresh breeees that oome rushing from the sea; But it's nothing less than murder when my darling's every breath Ctooked and strangled with the poison from that cursed swamp of death. Oh, 'tis not enough that such men own the very ground we tread, And the shelter that we crouch in, and the too la thai r earn our bread; They must put their blotted mortgage on the air and on the sky, - And shut out our little heaven, till our children Dine and die! Tea, we wear the cheapest clothing, and our meals are scant and brief. And perhaps those fellows fancy there's a cheaper grade of grief; But the people all around here, losing children v - friends and mates, 1 Oan inform them that affliction hasnt any under­ rates. Ob,- IIIO *IR 1B PUM SND whoiesoihe wnere some ba­ bies crow and reet, And they trim them ont with ribbons, and they feed em with the best; Alt the love they get's an insult to the God of love on high, If- to earn those children's living some one else's child must die. I'm ao grumbler at the rulers of " this free and hap­ py land," And I dont go round explaining things I do not understand; But there must be something treacherous in the steering of the law, When we get a dose of poison out of every breath we draw. I have talked too much, good preacher, and I hope you won't be vexed, Bat I'm going to make a sermon, with that white face for a text; And I'll preach it, and I'll preach it, till I set our people wild 'Gainst the heartless, reckless grasping of the iww who killed my child. --Harper * Weekly. at Washington, then in a lot on the Taylor homestead, five miles back of Louisville, and then taken to Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville. In 1878 the re­ mains were placed in the beautiful cemetery at Frankfort, where they are in the company of many illustrious dead, including Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson. FILLMORE. Millard Fillmore lies buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery, three milesfrom Buffalo. The grave is well taken care of, and is a beautiful spot. A tall monument con­ tains the inscription, '4 Millard Fillmore. Born January 7, 1800. Died March 8, 1874. " The grave is at the eastern ex­ tremity of the lot in the center of a grassy space. At its head rises the monument. In the southeastern corner is a Norway spruce, which shadows the grave. Fillmore's daughter sleeps near the remains oi her father. An iron urn for flowers lies under an evergreen. Near Fillmore's grave are those ol Bunker Hill heroes, of Stephen Champ- lin and Bid well, who fell at Cedar Creek. FIKKCK. The remains of Franklin Pierce rest Every prostrating malady is a deviation from the state of nature. The infant, "mewling and puking in its nurse's arms," is an abnormal phenomenon. Infancy should be a period of excep­ tional health ; the young of other creat­ ures are healthier, as well as prettier, purer and merrier than the adults, yet the childhood years of the human ani­ mal are the years of sorest sickliness ; statistics show that among the Cauca­ sian races men of 30 have more hope to reach a good old age than a new-born child has to reach the end of its second year. The reason is this : The health- theories of the average Christian man and woman are so egregiouslv wrong that only the opposition of their better instincts helps them--against their con­ science, as it were--to maintain the struggle for a tolerable existence with anything like success, while the helpless infant has to conform to {hose theories --with the above result,---Popular /Sci­ ence Monthly. •Wicked tor Clerg y men. Rev. ---. Washington. D. C., writes: believe it to be all wrong and even wicked for clergymen or other pubiic men to be led info at Concord N IT in tho OU fVmAt^rv 8ivm6 testimonials to quack doctors or vile \r •* a TC . U Cemetery atuffs caiie<j medicines, but when a really mer- ou Main street. Pierce's monument is ot j itorious article is made of valuable remedies Italian marble, and bears the following : j known to all, that all physicians nse and trust " Franklin Pierce--Born Nov. 23, 1804. 'n daily, we should freely commend it. I Died Oct. 8, 1869." The Piere • lot it I therefore cheerfully and heartily commend at the northwestern corner of the- Miuot inclosure, and contains about an acre ol ground It is surrounded by a neat iron fence six feet high, traversed by concrete paths, and neatly sodded. The monu­ ment displays a spire with cap, die and plinth, rebtiug on a base of granite three Hop Bitters for the good they have done me and my friend*, firmly believing they have no equal for family use. I will not be without them."--jfete Yff!k Baptist Weekly. Habitual Month Breathing. ( Many people sleep with the mouth and one-quarter" feet square. It is su- I °?fn; ^ Perform mounted by a draped erL, and its total 1 5,!^ transacted by „ height is fourteen feet eignt inches. ® no^ Tlrerc are many objections to i July 8, 1849." Two nephews are buried L the Old Cemetery the founders of Con- I . ' mr •_ clearl->" then* ^trion ronnri nhonf in nriA I «jord resti 1 ° with her. The region round about is one of great natural beauty, and commands a view of the Southwest mountains. At the southeastern edge of the adjoining woods is the home which Madison in­ herited when a child. It is well kept at the present date. MOTTROE. James Monroe is buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va. It is on a beautiful site. Five feet under ground, in a vault of bricks and granite, the re­ mains rest. On the sarcophagus, on a brass plate, is this memento : " James Monroe, born in Westmoreland county, 28th April, 1758, died in the city of New York 4th of July, 1831. By order of the General Assembly his remains were re­ moved to this cemetery 5th July, 1858, as an evidence of the affection of Virginia for her good and honored son." Over this monument is a gothic temple twelve feet long and nine feet wide, resting upon four pillars on a foundation of dressed Virginia granite. A cast-iron screen al­ most prevents a view of the monument within. The temple is painted drab color and sanded. The iron is consider­ ably rnstei Around it -fesSs of flowers and tall oaks. The air in passing through the BUCHANAN. ! channels of the nose, for instance, is James Buchanan is buried at Woodwork • temperature of the body Hill Cemetery, Lancaster, Pa., on the banks of the Cones toga. The grave lot is inclosed by a neat iron fence. A fine sarcophagus of Italian marble contains the following: : Here rest the remains of James Bu-: lohanan, fifteenth President of the United: : States. Born in Franklin county. Pa.,' : April 23, 1791. Died at Wheatland, June: :l, 1868. ; The lot is 30x12 feet, with white and black granites supporting the fence. All around the fence is a hedge of blooming roses, and rose bushes are in the inelos- j before it reaches the larynx. Thus breathing, no matter how low the tem­ perature may be, the sense of oold is never felt below the border of the soft palate. But when one breathes through the mouth on a ccld day the sensation proceeds as far as the larynx, and an ir­ ritating cough may be caused. Then, again, in nose breathing the air is moist­ ened bv the natural secretions which oover the turbinated bones in a condi­ tion of health, and the short bristly hairs at the openings of the nostrils act as a filter to arrest impurities and reduce the liklihood of laryngial, bronchial, or TOMBS OF. THE PRESIDEWS. WASHINGTON. The grave of the first President, the Father of His^Country, has been visited by so masy thousands of Americans and foreigners that it will be of very little interest to the majority of readers tc pernse a description of the place now. The Mount Vernon Association has taken good care of the first President's last resting-place. Washington's remains were deposited in their present recep­ tacle in 1837. The vault was built in accordance with the provisions of the President's will. It is of brick, with an arched roof. Over the gateway, in a 1 marble tablet, is the simple inscription, j " Within this enclosure rest the remains | of Gen. George Washington." Two ooffins lie in the vestibule of the vault; the first is that of Washington, the other that of Martha Washington. JOHN ADAMS. Beneath the Unitarian Church at Quincv, Mass., may be found the re­ mains of two American Presidents. The church was completed in 1828, and the body of John Adams was removed from the family vault in the cemetery just across the street into the room beneath the church. John Quincy Adams' body was placed in the same room in 1848. Their wives are buried with them. The bodies lie in leaden caskets placed in cases hewn from solid blocks of stone. The tombs are seldom visited, and the apartment is kept dingy and dirty. In the church room above may be found the following inscription : " " Beneath these walls are deposited the mortal re­ mains of John Adams, son of John and Susanna (Boylston) Adams, second President of the United States. Boin 29-30 October, 1735. On the 4th of July, 1776, he pledged his life, fortune and sacred honor to the independence of his country. On the 3d of Septem­ ber, 1783, he affixed his signature to the definative treaty with Great Britain which acknowledged that independence, and consummated the redemption of his pledge. On the 4th of July, 1826, he was summoned to the Independence of Immortality and to the Judgment of his God. This house will bear witness to his piety, this town (his birthplace) to his munificence, history to his patri­ otism, posterity to the depth and com­ posure of his mind." JACKSON. Andrew Jackson is buried at the Her­ mitage, his famous home, on the Leb­ anon pike, eleven miles from Nashville. A massive monument of Tennessee granite marks his grave and that of his wife. It is placed in a corner of the garden. The grave is kept in good order. Three steps lead up to its foot. It is composed of eight fluted doric columns, supporting a plain entablature and dome, upon which stands an urn. In- sida the space is ornamented with white stucco work. A pyramid resting on a square is the monument proper, and nearly beneath it rest the bones of the President. A stone contains this in­ scription : " Gen. Andrew Jackson. Born March 16, 1767; died June 8, 1845." Jackson's wife is buried <m tthe right of the pyramid. » VAN BURKN. Martin Van Buren sleeps in the little village cemetery of Kiuderhook, Co­ lumbia county, N. Y. The President's grave is in the family lot. A granite shaft fifteen feet high contains the fol­ lowing : ; MARTIN VAN BTJBKJJ, ; ; VIHth President of the U. 8. ; ; Horn 5, 1782. ; : Died July 24, 1862. : ure. The spot is kept carefully, and is ! pulmonary, disease. Infants, athletes, a wroto « i-ort i™ savages and animals breathe through the none--theordinary civilized man employs the mouth to an unnecessary, and often to a very injurious, extent. The causes of mouth breathing are myriad. Complete or partial closure of the passages, polypus, congenital bony rr, , t A1 closure, enlarged tonsils, protruding The building of the teeth, adhesion of the soft palate of the in hv Mr posterior Wall of the nh<u*™-r nil always attractive. IITNCOIIN. Abraham Lincoln is buried at Oak Ridge Cemetery, Springfield, 111. A fine pile of marble, granite and bronze marks the spot. It bears the single word, "Lincoln." This memorial is probably one of the most magnificent in the United States, monument was begun by Mr. Lincoln mends m Springfield. It was dedicated are sufficient causes of mouth breathing Oct. 15, 1874. It stands in a tract of ( The indications are not so subtle as not seven and a half acres. From north to j to be readily recognized. Retracted south its length is U9 feet 6 inches, hpg, open mouth, receding gums, pro- Its breadth is 72 feet 6 inches. The ! truding teeth, shrunken ailcfdecreased structure is of blocks of New Hampshire ; size of the nostrils' orifices wrinkles at granite The mam platform is nearly .the eyes' outer angles, and lines extend- Bixteen feet from the ground, approached j mg from the alae to the mouth angles are the predominant signs. The effects of mouth breathing upon the pharynx are often most deplorable. The mucous membrane becomes much irritated. A chronic engorgement of the blood ves- may take place, until permanent dilitation of the vessels is produced, and so on until the disease known as clergy­ man's sore throat is produced. The writer devotes a part of his space to by four grand staircases with balus­ trades. The main platform is sevonty- two feet square. From the center rises the shaft twelve feet square at the baae and ninety-eight feet from the ground. Shields of polished granite bearing the names of the States encircle the square. It is a fitting tribute to the martyred President. JOHNSON. The grave of Andrew Johnson is a . -- ~r -- Greenville, Tenn., on a spot selected by •' )Winf? the bad results of sleeping with himself. A fine granite arch upon a . mouth open, and suggests an appro- broad base marks the site. It contains •« P"8*® remedy. If ail snorers were to the inscription: "Andrew Johnson, -j ^ppt it one of the most disagreeable seventeenth president U. S. A. Born noises of the night would be silenced, December 21, 180a Died July 31,1875. i for people who breathe through their His faith in the people never wavered." | ijoses while sleeping never snore. The The monument is of marble npon a ; ,-7, aQ<* clearly printed pages of base of granite nine and a half by seven which this monograph oonsists appaar feet. The tomb was erected by the t° exhaust the subject.--Dr. Clinton three President's surviving sons, i ^raffner.m JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. On the other side of the pulpit is the tablet containing the inscription to the other Adams. It reads thus: " Near this place reposes all that could die of John Qttincy Adams, son of John and Abigail (Smith) Adams, sixth President of the United States. Born 11th July, 1767, amidst the storms of civil commo­ tion, he nursed th e vigor which inspires a Christian. For more than half a cent­ ury, whenever his country called for his labors in either hemisphere or in any oapacity be never spared them in her cause. On the 24th of December, 1814, he signed the second treaty with Greal Britain, which restored peace within her borders. On the 23d of February, 1848. he closed sixteen years of eloquent de­ fense of the lessons of his youth by dying at his post in her great National Council. A son worthy of his father, a citizen shedding glory on his country, a scholar ambitious to advance man­ kind, this Christian sought to walk humbly in the sight of his God." The church itself is bnilt of Quincy granite and surrounded by elms anil horse- chestnuts. JEFFEBSON. v & a thick growth of woods, a few LV KIM i it. The inscription is in large black j letters. The name of his wife appears ! upon another face oi the shaft, while on the third is to be seen the name of a son. The house is at the southern end of the village, near the creek, a frame building, which has been entirely re­ modeled of late years. His other resi­ dence, two miles south of the town, is the property of the farmers who live there. HABRiaON. , The resting-place of William Henry Harrison is situated at North Bend, Ind. The gave is a simple mound unfeneed, on a little knoll, and is shaded by beech­ es and other trees. There is no monu­ ment and no inscription anywhere to tell the story of the life of the departed hero. Since the decoration of Scott Harrison's grave the mound has been improved somewhat. The vault has been cemented on the top in imitation of stone slabs. The iron door on the left is now securely fastened, and some effort is made to keep the place in good order. The spot is a lovely one, And could be made by proper improvement to do hon­ or to the remains of the hero of Tippe­ canoe. TYLER. The grave of John Tyler is practically unmarked. A little mound, covered with bushes, just ten yards from the grave of Monroe, in Hollywood Ceme­ tery, Richmond, is pointed out as the spot where a President's remains lie. At its head is a small magnolia tree, on the south is another magnolia tree, and on the north a young juniper tree. The grave is neither inclosed nor curbed. Near by ar6 the graves of Monroe, of William Allen, one < f Jeff Davis' bonds­ men ; of Dr. Lawrence Roane Warren, the philanthropist; of James M. Mason, the Confederate Envoy to England, and of " Little Joe," son of Jefferson Davis, killed in Richmond during the war. surviving Pilasters on either side of the plith j support funeral urns. The scfoll of the ' constitution is carved on the die, and also an open Bible, upon which rests a ' hand. The shaft is festooned by the j American flag at the top and surmounted Hew York .Express. Sweet-Minded Womea* So great is the influence of a sweet- minded woman on those around her that it is almost boundless. It is to her that friends come in seasons of sorrow and by an eagle with outstretched wings.-- 1 sickness tor help and oomfort; one sooth- " * 1 ing touch of her kindly hand works won- * -ders in the feverish child; a few words ] let fall from liar lips in the ear of a sor­ rowing sister does much to raise the load of grit f that is bowing its victim down to the dust m anguish. The iiusband comes home worn our with the pressure of business, MK! feeling irritable with the world in geueral; but when he en­ ters the cosy sittin.cc-rooin, aad sees the biaze oi the bright lire, and meets his wife's smiling face, he succumbs in a moment to tliu soothing influences which acts as the baita of Giieiwi to Lis wounded spirits, that are wearied with combating with the stern realities of life. The rough school-boy flies in a rage from the taunts of his companions to find solace in his mother's Bmilc; the little one, full of grief with its own large trouble, finds a haven of rest on its mother's breast; and so one might go on with instance after instance of the in­ fluence that a sweetminded woman has in the social life with which it is connected. Beauty is an insignificant power when compared with hers. Young OMM. Young Mr. Gould is undoubtedly the youngest man who has, or has had for many years, a recognized position in tlfe street. He bad barely attained his ma­ jority when his father made him a part­ ner in a firm of which'the other members were his own confidential broker, W. E. Connor, and his private secretary, G. P. Morosini. Mr. Jay Gould contributed to the capital of the firm $500,000. The capital invested by the other partners is not stated, but from their positions and the fortunes it is presumed they have accumulated by their connection with Mr. Gould it is estimated that they con­ tributed about $250,000 each, making the capital of the firm $1,000,000. This is an unusual capital for a simple broker­ age house, in which membership in the Stock Exchange and the attendant cred­ it supply to a great extent the capital that would be required in ordinary com­ mercial business. It is understood that the new firm does not intend to transact a general business--that is, to take ac­ counts as commission firms do--but that its business will be confined to orders from Mr. Gould. In spite of the exclusive business which the firm will do. the junior part- The (Jonductor. ^Philadelphia Ledge&] What an alert type of men "the con­ ductors on the steam railroads are! Pro- bably the engineers are also, but there ner, Mr. George J. Gould, is a person j "J0.? 8°°^ chance to get a look at them in whom the street naturally takes a very I they have their hands on the lev- considerable interest. The street knows little of him, but believes that it is likely to know much. In personal appearance he is prepossessing, hardly more than a boy in looks, yet more than a boy in business. He is about the average height, slender, yet muscular. His com­ pletion is swarthy, his hair and promis­ ing moustache are black, and his eyes, like his father's, are dark and penetrat­ ing. Like his father, he is quiet and the company of hie reticent; but m the company Near by are buried 16,000 Confederate friends he is full of life and boyish soldiers around a tall pyramid of granite. POLK. At the corner of Vine and Union streets, Nashville, at the old family homestead, may be found the grave of James K. Polk. The monument is a block, twelve feet square by twelve in height. It i^ appropriately ornamented and contains, among other inscriptions, this : "James K. Polls, eleventh Presi­ dent of the United States. Born Novem­ ber 2, 1795 ; died June 15, 1849." He was buried here nearly thirty years ago. An iron gate, surmounted by an eagle, opens from Vine street into a broad av­ enue bordered by mulberry trees and silver-leafed poplars. This road leads to the Polk homestead, a large brick honse, three stories high. The tomb is sur­ rounded by a grassplot, which is in- circled by a walk of white s^lls. Shrubs and flowers beautify the spot and make it look quiet and bright. TAYIIOR. The remains of Zachary Taylor have been moved three times. They repose now in a public spot at Frankfort, Ky. The body was first placed in a cemetery spirits. He has been educated privately and thoroughly, and, as to business ex­ perience, has traveled extensively with his father, both through this country and abroad, and has spent the last two years in his father's office.--New York Sun. • Sickness a Disgrace. All bodily ailments are more or less appeals for help ; nor can we doubt in what that help should consist. The more fully we understand the nature of any disease, the more clearly we see that the discovery of the cause means the discovery of the cure. Many sicknesses are caused by poisons, foisted upon the system under the name of tonic bever­ ages or remedial drugs; the only cure is to eschew the poison. Others, by habits more or less at variance with the health laws of nature. To cure such we have to reform our habits. There is nothing accidental, and rarely anything inevitable, about a disease; we can safely assume that nine out of ten com­ plaints have been caused and can be cured by the sufferers (or their nurses) themselves. " God made man upright." ers, and their eyes peering along the j line of track as far as keen vision can | reach. But the conductor is all alive j under his quiet and impassive exterior. ! There is little in his car he does not see, j even while his whole attention appears j to be concentrated by the ticket he I holds in one hand to be cut by the | punch in the other. And there is'noth- ; ing he does not hear and understand ! down to th" most needless question. : Amid the ciangor of the swift moving I train, the slightest unusual noise or jar ; about the running gear tells its story to his acutely educated ear and quioKened senses. And if anything is wrong, or suspected to be wrong, how promptly, yet how quietly, with what perfect free­ dom from fuss, or anything approaching flurry or panic, he moves toward the right place. He is the very embodi­ ment of self-poised qui viiie. What soldiers these men would make! AT THE extreme North clock pendu­ lums are more strongly attracted to the earth than in other regions, and make shorter sweeps, therefore beat quicker time. In order to provide for this, sec­ onds pendulums are made one-fifth inch longer than in equatorial regions. THE person who labors simply to kill time and get his wages, has an iifcsome task before him, but he who labors with a view to enhancing his employer's inter­ ests, finds employment pleasant.--Bill Nye. THOUSANDS of families have had occasion to try 7the never-failing qualities of Drf Boll's Coigh Syrup, and they all unite in praise of this wonderful prescription. Carrying Concealed Weapons. We hear of tragedies by the pistol almost daily, and the nnmber is by no means on the decline. This is scarcely surprising, however, if we reflect on the great army of citizens who habitually carry concealed weapons on their per­ sons. At a very low estimate, one per cent, of our city population regularly complete their toilet by the addition of a revolver. The estimate, which is be­ lieved to be considerably below the actual fact, gives us an armed forced of 12,000, equipped and ready, at a mo­ ment's notice, to take human life. Of this vast number, not more than three or four hundred, at the most, have the right or license to carry pistols, if we exoept the police. The majority of those holding lioenaes are either business men whose hours keep them out of doors late at night or private watchmen, bank messengers, etc. But what shall be said of the ten thousand unlicense pistol carriers, who, having no legitimate reason to show why they should be allowed to carry such weapons, yet do so in violation of law and as a menace npon the public peace and order. The bully or hothead who has a revolver concealed in his hip- pocket will court a quarrel where an un­ armed man, however brave, would dis­ creetly shun it The possession of fire­ arms is, in fact, a direct invitation to rowdyism, riot and very often murder,-- New York Star. Cared ot Brinkinf. "A. young friend of mine was cured of an in­ satiable thirst for liqnor, which hud go proe- trated him that he was unable to do any busi­ ness. He was entirely enred by the use of Hop Bittern. It ail.iyed all that burning thirst, tpok awii.Y the appetite for liquor, made hi* nerves steady, and ho baa remained a sober and steady man for more than two years, and has no desire to return to his cups. I know of a number of others that have been cored of drinking by it"--From a leading K. R. official, Chicago, III--Times. They Were Bailt to S*fif '-m lie married daughter of a contnie#>r comes to visit her father and OM going out with him for a walk to th#* scene of his h'tesfc labors bursts out Postalieallv: "Oh, pa, what lovely houses fho3e are that you Imve been building--those cot­ tages along the bank of the river. I have an awful great mind to take one and bring the children liere and spend the summer near von." The contractor (deeply affected)--"No, no my child! Never! Not that I would not fain have you near me every day- and hour, but, darling, those villas were not built to live in--they were bikilt to •ell!" Our Work. Whether we are happy in our work or not depends upon the way in which we do it. The man who goes to his task reluctantly, like a scourged slave, has no enjoyment in his labor. It is, to him, like a perpetual punishment. How slowly, to his eyes, the sun rises to its zenith! How slowly it sinks to the west­ ern horizon! With leaden feet the hours go by. And he dreads the morrow which is to be but a repition of the dreary to-day. His sluggish pulse does hardly beat. He seems but half alive. How different it is with the man who works with a will! Whatever he touches becomes at once interesting to him. He is absorbed in what he is abont, and he exclaims at night, "How short the day has seemed!' Not an hour has hung heavily on his hands. THE New York Clipper lately cited the case of Cnpt. Jacob Schmidt, of Tompkins- villo, Staten island. N. V., who had been a great sufferer from rheumatism for many years. He used St. Jacobs Oil with splen- dideucoess. DKAN STAKLBT was very proud of the Welsh blood in his veins. "If there is any brilliancy and vivacity in my fam­ ily," he once said, "I attribute it to the fact that my grandfather, a Cheshire 'Squire, had the good sense to marry a bright, mercurial Welsh woman, from whom we have inherited a share of the Celtic fire." FROM the Atlanta (Ga.) Sun-day Phono­ graph: The editor of the Pike* County AVM'M has been cured of rheumatism by St. Jacobs Oil. A YOUNG man onoe oonsulted old Commodore Vanderbilt to tell him of losses sustained by dabblipg in stocks. The story tohl, the Commodore said : " Sonny, don't ever buy what you can't pay for, and don't see what you haven't got" 8OTI-EUF.ES from Constantinople shonld one trial of Kidney-Wort and be cured. A RKMARK.I.BT,*: clock has been set n in the municipal library of Rouen, goes for fourteen months without re­ winding, and altowB the hour and the day of the month. It was originally oonstmcted ki 1782, hut underwent some alterations in 1816. Don't Die in Che Honw, Ask Druggists for " Bough on Rats." It clears oct rain, mice, roaches, flies, bed-bugs. 15c. I Dm. WIXCHEUE/S TEETHING Byrnp tu failed to give immediate relief when nsei in cases of Simmer Compl&iat, Cholera-snfantnm, or paine is the etomach. Mothers, when your little darlings are suffering from, these or kin­ dred causes, do sot hesitate to give it a trial. Yon will sorely be pleased with the eh&ming effect. Be rare to buy Dr. Wincheli's Teething Syrep. Bold bjall druggists. C/uij 25 per bottlft, . nervous prostration debility relieved lNi»T«E5TioK, dyspepsia and all forms of genera! .. taking MENBMAN'S IVJ-TONIZCN BEEF TONIC, the only preparation of beef containing ita entire nutritious properties. It coijtiiins hlood-mak- ing, focve-^t'iioratiit:' and (if*.*-sustaining }<rop- erties; as invaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the re suit of exhaustion, nei'vous pros­ tration, overwork or aeute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary camplaints. Cas­ well, Hazard & Co., proprietors. New York. Pom Het-dache, Constipation, liver Complaint and all bilious derangements of the blood, then is no remedy as sure acd safe as Eilert's Day­ light Liver Pills. They stand unrivalled in re­ moving bile, toning the stomach and in giving healthy action to the liver. Sold by all druggists. A KEVOLUTION in the curative art has been effected by DH. HOLMAN'S PAWS. Instead of pouring drugs down the tliroat, whipping up the system bv its immediate action, and then paralyziug it by its consequences, this pad ap­ plies through absorption a healthy action and maintains it to a cure. PETROLIA, Pa., Jan. 6. 1879. UESSBS. KENNEDY & Co. : My hair is grow­ ing out so fast that I can almost soe it growing myself, through the usa of vour Carboline. D. NIXON. FOB Bheumatism, Sprains and Bruises, use Uncle Sam's Nerve and Bone Liniment, sold by i all druggists. KEMJFED FRO^ljEATH. William J.Couffhlfn,of Somerrilie. M iss., says: In ) fall of 1876 I was taken with bleeding of t ie lun^s, fol- I lowtd by ft sevei © cough. I lost and flesh, | and was confined to tuy bed. In 1877 I was admitted to j the hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my lung as j b« as a half dollar. At one time s report went around tbat I was dfiad. I gare op hope, Imt a friend told me of DB. WILIJIM HAJ.I.'S BALSAM FOK THE LUNGE. I got a bottle, when, to my turpi ise, 1 coimuonccd to tt-ul be& tor, and to-day I feel bettor t.ian for three year* pant. I write thi* hopinjf tveiy one afflicted with dieo-vacd lung* will take OB. WILLIAM HALL'S RALSAM, and be coo- Tinced that CONSUMPTION CAM BE CURED. I car. P<«1- tively a&y it baa done more good than all the other me4l> eines I have taken aince my aickneea. fiOIS(< WEST-Po yon want to learn all about Dakota--the wonderland--it* crops, climate and people { Bend $1 for 40-col. weekly newspaper 6 mo*. Land law* and map of Territory. "Berald," Alexandria, Dakota. COUGH The Illuminator. The existence of good feeling oh the part of the French Nation forthepeO-ge of this country isabown ' the presentation of a Colossal bronze figure of Freedom holding aloft the torch of Liberty. Beauty, with usefulness, is com­ bined in this immense work of art, as the bright, blazing torch will serve the purpose of a beacon light in the harbor of New York. There is another figure whicH will chal­ lenge larger praise and ad­ miration than even th*-; great work above referred to. It is illustrated here­ with, and represents the aped and worthy ST. J ACOB, holding aloft in his hand that beacon which Will guide aright all sailing upon the sea of life, Whose waters abound with the shoals and dan- Kerous places of sickness and disease. The light It casts is designed to show that ST. JACOBS OIL is the true and trusted means of keeping the body on its proper course, and of easing and "mining it sh'.mld it be unfortunately cast upon the shoals of rheumatism or other painful ailments. Thou ands of crateful ones throughout the world have proved the value and felt the good of this Great Uenuan Remedy, and are glad to recommend it to all needing the services of just such a remedy. In this connection Mr. John S. Briggs, a well known citizen of Omaha, Neb., told a newspaper man that he was terribly afflicted with an acute attack of rheumatism in his back. The disease, which had been preying upon him for years had drawn him out of shape. He resortea to every remedy known to physicians^ but found no relief until he tried SR. JACOBS On., one bottle of which effected a complete and radical cure. Another case may justify reference: A VETERA* SEAMAXS TROUBLE. of our oldest citizens, Captain C. W. Bovnton, th® Government Light-house keeper at this point, ill probably one of the oldest seamen in America, having sailed twenty .six years on salt water. After this forty-six years' service his evesight failed him and he kept the Light at Chicago until the Government, built the Gross Point Light here, when he was transferred. While seated in my store this morning the Captain volunteered the following written statement: "This is to certify that I have been afflicted with rheumatism fcr vm •-- TMMU nfy Consul By aooidcntal East Indian herb, D£ ^ r aMsiSNrtdfy tmwi child oi Cdiwuw^ «kd gives to the afflicted this for tiro stamps to pKf dress GHIDBOCK K OO£J Philadelphia, P«>, jTr&Mt.i of a stamp ftw pmtage. Iter are not i Mrar wotM. We will i onrl&rireatM) •« JT laiiaiiM tfliff F. FREE! FREfill The Celebrated fti 11 fi lllaiij «f j while Waiting this flicted eri Chronic, Owe*,* lars. Enclose , tatuataktiaiL. •lOie LaaeaUrr Aw. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Scat la tli«> W«rM. (Set tha cennlae. •ry varka^r bit* *ar Traie-msurlf ai -HrfcMi Kr**•!'». KOI!) iTKRVWHEH 5.300 ufe IS WANTED, TO SELL Cemplete, iwludlnK If la 1 Profusely Illustrated. New Fli' 1.1). th* finest t'TOT iti-ide. and Mother. Guiteau, the SurawHL of the ShooUnc; the Siak tlka Fonaral P*. geant, 4c. The only complete ana awtbaBtic work. There in a Fortane fmr A(MM nw in " aeid IVBARD *KT DB. CONSUMPTION CAN 8E <HMG0T mHALLS KBAL&AM pain, though still limping somewhat when walk­ ing, from long force of habit. C. W. BOVNTON " Referring to the foregoing faCts, I might allude to numerous similar cases that have eome to my notice, but "a word to the wise is sufficient." JOHN GOKBEL, Pharmacist, Evanston, III Vrce!--AMuiealJonniaL Addna I. Bnha DM srs.ii. it* i teiabrai _ 1 «a< jiliurt hv thf tSa aliif aweata ui Ishtueaaaeraaa tha clMiifewHiiwh icpmH "" nation ia nat an tacarabla atalarfy. BALSAM wiif aara jmm, mrmm ifenalatial aid faila. (Jottgh) •{ Organ*. L •f the Laan* I ataeaie, and prevents •aagh »raf«Kai< HT A rpptTPg Oa«awf«»ita». Mtm,uuaM W JX 1 ull-lju Amiritnji Witafti e» PitUfcarrk. ra. tOD > week In jronr own tewa. Tenaa and f5 oatH 9 C O free. Addreae H. HaIXKTT k Oo., Portland. Ma DR. HfTNTER, lOSStataat.,Chicago,treat*ao.-oeaafolly Throat and linns Dlieaana by Tnhalattoa. AfQAWKKK. $11 a day at home aa«Uy made. Corifr W I £• outfit free. Addreaa TBCI A Co., Augutta, Ma. VnilliC MEN 1' would lura IUUIHJ III til four montha. and b •ation, hidreaa VALENTINE BROS. im Telegraphj kk be oerta&i of a 4.. JanesvlUe, Wfc. S777 A YEAR and expenses W Amenta. Ontfit free. Address P. O. Vlckery, Aafiiita, Ma. 1,000 EDITORS-^ iAI, ritRS.S. 181 Fifth Ave., Chicago, m. Addreaa Jar Broaaon, DetrolTHte* «5L torv »r Kupland •*> Umo VJU, lota; on]« Kng. Literature, t i' I'.::MO TO), taan bound, fcr onlj &<» riftt* , .... jy„. HA.NHi.lTAN BOOK CO.. It W. 1Mb St.. N.T. P.O. Bo* OS From the Cradle to tne urave.--i rit'K*>itcugravi;!t;, nm •-i«arneld family wttk prapkic cce&ea ol Lw lifti. 2S fiuecuUeti one Tb« famihv groop ocmriiec tbc c*»ntr« pt*ae.' Flnpta copies M per huudred.--3^0,000 cold In New York and Brooklyn In 5 *r**ks. J. W. A G PubllfH***, a;i'H»rclav street, N, X.r~-A^vut: wiu.tni ev *Ywhare. Orders prumpUy JilKtl. ipi-O--Aefiirts wanted far th* life of Prr<- d<*nt<*aruc'd. A faithtul litntotj from cradle to Krave. by th© eii>i»u!iit biographer. r<>i. OOTIWUII. Booke all ready for delivery. An volume. Indorsed edition. Lirural i*rma. Af&nis take ordorri tor troni 30 to 50 copte* Outeelib any ?'thvr book tsn t > one. Agents never made money so wt-. The book sells itself. K.iperienee «->t iitree^/nry Faikmre unknown. All make immense Private TMM free. CZORGE VINSON A Co., P#rtUad, Maine. For Oliillm and Fover AND ALL DISEASES OMMI bj Malarial PolaoulDB of Uw Maa*. A WARB.ANTED OUKB. Pri<5C» 1 -OO. For tale by all DraggM*- w*. M• Layth6 Aie to the Root ff you would dentroy the ci*- keriBg worai. For uyexto^ nal p«iii,flore, wound or lame- Dess of manor beast, use oaly MEXICAN MUSTASGLINI- ftENT. It penetrates afl mus­ cle and flesh to the very tone, expelling all Inflammation, soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part is ni» other Uniment did or can. So salth the experience of two seneraHQaui of sofferert, and pi LECMLIGHT!fRl fcr-WKRvoua D «m impaired power* E1 P Sd-, ttapr ^^nt fga^ ATOwg ^ ^ 81,86ud 88 Fifth AIVOM, CBUeego, I? -Improved! Klectro-SiacnetJc Beteaarf , • Pad combined; aiaa of Pad. 7*18 h» TDIITU W MMHTT. mm* , S««t aft# «sht of rym. lock at % Minor ~rT~T< . • ' O.W.P. Ho. 44 7i my lahw waa ezceeuia«lT ka»> thfr ©uafViYry, foUotre^ livrtf? Tt NIC, fr»;n wiucb I rt» UEHT,Lij!fl£W?:I w;UI SUILERUIK from geuerpi debility to sc.h ac e^t<?at Ui:*s BIT labor deceome totw. A vacation ot mrantJa dii not give ID# raaeb relic f, T nt 011 th* ^ iurrea^f d rr«w^rfltion ;ir.d Artiiistiru© I o<?ivun «ho 'iso of your ii-.n elized a!m;)»tfm'riodiate and A*ond»»rfu' results. 'I »,oold vn^ :y vefamed 1 so-:nd tuTit in* na*o-ai w waa not psriiiae-acly abated. I l-ave uem! th:eo b»5ttla& oi \ Lie 6iuc<? ii-i donetwiceHhialC bor that I erc«rdid ia trie wme time daring my iUoess. and .litii doubk» the es** fWlth tbe trnnoml cjriT end Tiror of bodrt hue coa.'.^ s cieKrnsM of thoughtr;evor before enioyed. --» . . -. work, Ifcnow not wnat. Igirett therrodit. J. P. WATSOV«PMTC: I 'The iron Tont# rf* a prepa rut torn ©/ ilraptdc o/' Mr&ti-. - t#'an Ht2rfsr jrtJktftlei*, with ihtf iromario*. Mi 2 'fthe Tonic baa not donet^a r ChMrch. T+y, O. | where uc im netcDnnrv, Ton! •AMfACTWia i« Ml DR. HARTER MEDIC 7 CO»T HO. £13 HOSiM SV » (K :>T*UI, Sf. IS'jtSt D>METTAURl Dr. METTATTE'S HEAUACBCE PIU •fiort time both SICK and NEEVOCS : tha nerront ajatcm. cleans-i' iho stoci: RA^OLAR LIEALTBY action of «,U« J O .T ELS. • • HEADACHE A fUl box of these valnp.;,:., PIX.i.s, with ftti: dlivcttana for •« Ijfw cure, MATTOD ta ANY TDDREM RECCI^T OF ulno three-cent <r«Tnp< > Iw lilt by All dnrj^uu at ^5c. "role Proprietors, B30W5 CHEMICAL Baltimore, MM* PILLS ETROLEUM JELLY Used aad approved by the leading PHTStt- GIAHS of EUROPE and AMERICA. Th® most Valuable Family Hemedy^ known. ^ . Eta AIM tin: CmgM, Colds, Bcra Threat, Crtmp and DipMhtria, 4 jWTtt thasL if and *0 seat aicM «f all «ir fooda DI3EAB30, X XOBBHOXBS, cat,Cr<rc9 and] Ftrftt Imiant atf womraa, BUM CUTS, CHTT. ^ S0SZ8, CUTS, CKTT.BT.ATira BXZir DISEABJA, JTHLUICAM^ CAXA2BH, HEM ~ " " ettANB mail. AT THE PHIUBBWlt EXUFMNTnON. . amm mm A* TU PAJUS swmmui. iks:' .•Mm

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy