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Sheridan Road News-Letter (1889), 23 Nov 1900, p. 4

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pom“: sop-s. DEMOCRATIC: â€"- “Anything to get in." D REPUBLICAN; _. f‘Anyghing' t a‘ keep the other fellcw'om.” ‘ -' Pnoulni'rxoxrâ€"“Anything l'égi- timute to save humanity {tom the destmctinn t-auxed by the iegnl- ziHl liq unr tréflic.” ' Prohibition Pmn’n’us Macy. Lns \nu‘eles, URL, Nov. 17 -- The census enumeration of pupa lution of California counties and cities recently made public con: tnins umny instructive facts and figures. '1 he com'parisons with 139“ Show mm the entire state has made .an increase in popu u- tion of not quite 23 percent. Nn Prohibition county lost pop ulatinn in the decade; . V Nine saluou'connties Show tosses in population yarying‘ from 2 2-3 = to '22 per cent. ‘ I 1. . ' Emery, Prohibition city showed handgun? gains in population: Sewn saloons cities sufiered 105695 from 6 to 36 per cent. ' The great saloon city of San Francisco, the. great trade acute-r of the state,"gained only 44% per cent, or less than two-thirds the average gain of the ,state. The capital city. Sucrnmeutg‘, the pnâ€" litica] hub of the state, ahd in the center of a great valley producing :1 a larger wheat yield, per acre. < than any other region ,on :earth. gained only 10 per cent. in popu- -lation. or féssv than,,one-half the nterage gain of the amte. ‘ Only one’ 39.1091; cit-y made W gain larger than the' average ‘growth of the state-éLos Angeleé â€"-and‘ tilt cjty annexed a 'very extensive énhurbnn area; which makes it difficult to ascextain that actual growth from 1890 to 1900 v "The fignnesfur thé Prohibition, cities are significant: ‘ I Riverside. .70 per cent. gain m i population. ‘ Pasadena, 86} per cent. gain in: pnpnlation. ‘ ’ > . ! Rgdlands. 152 per cent. gain inl pd‘pulation. - g . - Berke-lei, 13391} per cent. gain in population. -~~The New Voice. What Wm We do? H ' There seems to be a great fu. rote in Chicago just now over the} question of crime’. So there is in‘ other plaoes. _ But what did, and; do, people expect? Nothing else}? would he the logical 'dntcome of? social, financial'and political sou: ditions. There has Just culmiuL! ated an overwhelming endorse-’ ment ofthe legalized saloon busi- ii ness. The sevenghundred thou- sand more or less people engaged in the liquor traffic have beén in- formed that this great christian nation is h bind their business, that the immense amonutfof capi- tal invested in the business and the immense volume of liquor business trsnsacted 18 a part of the great national prosperity} ” Why :hould théy not then. consider themselves a “protected industry.” a privilwred class? But the sa- loon business is the politic source of most of the crime in society Close up the saloons and we have taken an immense stride towards stopping crime and iluminating criminals But what will we do? What can we do when city mayors. eity attorney‘s city alderman, jns- does and judges, ahefififi. coast: bias and city marshals all visit not oulv the ‘legalized saloons but also pgtrouizénthe “wide open’ “blind pigs"? It is reported that a certain “blind pig" in this (:1 ty ' has recently been patron} {wt only bya sheriff and con bItS, but (by the judges of con; and‘even by 8. states attorney, knowing that the place‘m iIlv timately carried on. How t [can we expect anything else t a carnival of crime? Ben Butterfield and family I moved to Hainesville." Mr. Emory Admits has Men quite sick for over a .waek, wit change for the better as yet iAllen Murrie mid family ‘ w maved to Lake Forest wbpi’e f‘g 9y r A 1 will make their future. homé : 'L George Fredericks and 3m» have rented the Mattie honéez re cently purchased by Dr. Saba? \er Mrs HamryW Wheelock left} km- day for Sumner. Iowa, to visit her brdther, item there she will g: to Denver, Colo ' _ 2 The Twentieth Centhr’y (flab will meet at Rev. SteVen's, ‘30::- day night, Nov. 20th Pan B. Fischer is the reshmnt for the coming year. > . r Rey. Stevens has prepare 1 series of ten sermons u: 1 the th 9. “Popular, Misconceptiopu me 1 ing Faith, Life: and Serv which will be the subjects for evening s'erViL-es for coming 5,? bath evenings. v i The ‘mercbnuts of Grays have entered intq an ngmeme c'lose their storeéiafi 8 p. m., the excaptiou of the twb w previous to Cliriskmas. This effect Monday night and will until March lst.' 1901. Some ' of oug readers will, ‘Ie-am with regret that leville E. Hone and family are man to leave , Ier beautiful new home in GleIIn e- “Stonehawn.” -~â€"for 'u NSILle'ki III New York. His position as ge imIl manager of the Associated Pres §III l the executive ofiices being in; th1 city, compels this change. for a I. ime at least. The Stones lmve beeI i‘ul: - scribers to tlm NEWS Luna irum the first and wmted every ismn ‘sml Ito [hem while traveling in E II :5»: Getyour'cafcndurs Primed Nzws LETTER ntficv. Itor Y _ “Up in Columbia county,” said 57 A man who spent the summer up the Hflxlson. r to a NewYo’rk Sun reporter, "§; Red} Back, a smal'l'hamlet; 26 miler's fromfl Albany and near East Chatha $1 and Creechy‘ Lake. Sow. Red Rock? he’t' much hf a place. but there is sung ‘hitg- interesting about it that I fztxégy all the'wurld doesn’t know. Th s5pres-' ent name is not the one it ha's , z; ' home, and what its other na "" I don't. know. Whatever it . people did not like it. and coqt‘ uded they would change it.» There " Is no‘ particular reason why they sharia call it» Red Rock. hut ithat was detcfihlned‘ upon, and so Red Rock it himmefl Then in the course of time strifngere‘ 0! an inquiring-1mm of mindifegam to ask why the place had such aiming: and nsvno remnyeould be glut; new-3 comers to the neighborhood he “an to; want 4 name thattmennt wm._\-hing.‘ This insistence grew soutron'g tint the; old residents began to look arofijizd for 3 I reason for the name of théixf’ place; V and at lust they found a huge'b'; xlder near by thich they said was “’13: t had suggested the name. But the t? wlder was’gr-ay instead of red and t‘: :‘proâ€" grusionists insisted that thatfi would not do. At hat, the, old-tim‘vrs hit upon a. new plan. and procuring a bar- rel of red paint, they pain-ted j', e blg rock ted. Red Rock. indeed,§i:- was now, Ind not only was all opgx‘sitién to the name pveroome, but the pi Eating ‘ ML, RED ROCK CLINGS' TO NA? 2E. of the rock every spring has gnome an annual festival and the pen] eele‘ In Me ft with a big picnic a‘nd men] celebration. It mu 3 new We: £5.01!!! and if there is any other tow / any- where on earth fin: is christem g- spring with red paint or a color, I don"! know pwhere it it, " GRA Y’S LAKE. 0! flow Town Clme by '7; and It. sturdy Re-olve not w Change It. . gith: Have , wider - 1 had 'Dt', old wk :30. any: the Ne, YorkBun. -~ ‘. is: Min Dune was but in‘Norfih Bail)- “eud, N. .53., on January 8. 1815. (hi.- da'ughder of ham and Phebe Dune; in 1856 she ”moved to Concord, S. H4. and when the m: came in 1861 opened 191‘ house in nut; city as a hoppflnl {or the sick volunteen .who came from all parts of the fine :0 enlist. When’thn Second New Elmpnhlm regiment wt. ordered m Pwtrruéuth (o be musteéed into service the it signed on going with Lit‘eo that she mlyht continue the work she had begun. and when the reghnent finally went south she accompanied it in spite of :he pumm- of (lav. Berry. 1who declared that. inasmuch as (he !Uuhed Stews government did no; and Au-u -~o nonnon‘ln nurses on the would not recognize nurse: on we: held, fine journey was hazardous. There were netwn other men who served isamr'suou the field duringthe war, and Min Dame was the (”Hymn to enter the mm when the in started turd remain until the (kin. During the ‘peninmlar campuign ihe shared fortunes- wlth thewldiasrs, he: first night at. Yorktown being 5 eat it I. feed box in the stable. At. Fa :- Oaks' a shell tore through the top of the ten 1 in which the Wii nursing lick Inda wounded..b‘ut she seeped injury. bur-j mg the: retreat of the James Min Demo led therllttle armypl sick “he had been in her care. wearing [heavy pair of ‘rubber boa". and a thin netting of mosquito clpt'h'covering her head. 0: ‘ the march one C! the s03dien Cropped idvead frdm’ exhaustion. and Mite Dame {halted the pmeasirlou while a grave was dog and the dead soldier buried, T-hen she placed) slab of phle 'wocd over the mound and gave orders to march. 4 At the railroad-“titan at Har-‘ rim's Landtng soldiers were hing landed on the train and Min Dam:- in- }Iisted that the nick one: should have rthe first chance for uocommodationu. 2811: won her poir.t._ [ During t-he teoo'nd Bull Run NIB- ; ptign Min Dnmebad her headquarter-d tat Stone Church. Near there she n‘n‘ {taken pruomr sud touched to the; {headquarters of Stonewall‘dnchon'.‘ rwho. mer listening to her story nod; flaming. her main within the Uncut ; orderefi a guard‘ot eight picked men Ni :escort her'to the northern lines. She; ;.sc:on alter Organised the New Hampv‘ shireflzefiefn-unflntionmndm'm.5th by 1‘ Gav. Gilmore to South Carolina to in-‘l [\ _ saw... the emdition d! the northern? 1 53mm". He:- mtuion was opposed i strongly by Mir: Dorothy Dix and f Others‘ on the ground thlt it was dune 4 gero'us‘ for a woman. But Miss Platte ! Wu obdnmte ind started on her jaur- fine)". The resqL‘: of her inurtigathnl ; was embodied 311.: report to Surgaon I GengpaL-Barnu; who pmmpfly ordered 1; that the some}: Argo and Fulton be ’ converted into hoopltal ships. and they § were the firm ores used in such eerv‘ce. g At the bank ot‘Gettysburg M‘s: ! Dame did'yolh’nt service on the 692:), Fund the Week ‘:'ouowing the close of t that great battle organized the Xew ; plhire Soldiers‘ Relief associa- \ hon. In. the staffing of 1864 she took I the field with the umy of the James and dining the cm Harbor campaign she hadheadqunrt'ers at the white house and lam} at the Eighteenth Corp! fieldhotpital at Broadway Lard- ing on the Apoomnttox. From there she issued sulpfles. gave orders and sent messengws. With the surrerdn- of_ the confederate Ayn-lily and the cea- satiun lot ho‘ti‘ities she remained with the. regiment until its disbandmen_t.. and then getu'med to Washington. . A GRAVE} WAS DU? AND THE DEAD SOLEIERI BURIED. In 1867. 1hr; ugh ihelefiorts of Mr. Chandler, of New Hampshire. and in recognition of her great services on due field, she was lppointed to a place in the currency division of the treas- ury depnrtmoznt. and remained then until is». With uhereturncd govCon- cord. A ,few years ago she presented tho’ Mud Nc-w Hampshire regiment I mdsame building It The Weir's. N. Futons ARIY NURSE. H:;vixere thv 8:1an reunions no nah held. At the recent state en- :gmpment of the‘zrand army In Con- n o! xu- flmnlet 1’. Due, Who Ben-vii “conch the Inn" Civil War.’ cord "minnow were may ”no "Inna; expreuln' their «in, NC!" at her lllneu. ‘ . When the Amy Inner with” was organized in Washington a yew from: d pug». The colonel (a m cos-pk! the post of danger. " * a; u the mold more ooioulo bun boo-tutu! in nation. In proportion to that-lun- ber. than one"! ol any out: grade. A general on keep under cover, more or lens. but the colours poultlon is with hits regimrnt. and when It Id. vanees he in expected to lentâ€"1m”. unpolis News. ‘ A........____.â€"- served in {he ranks. Thou ‘wcre in the city o pod may wink: of the old army who now rook high in bud- nm life or ch“ 056:. um one of then nppmched the captain of his old company in the union any. Tho prints of ihe 01d time room! his oo- periot officer wrongly, laying enthusi- asticoliy tho! he was proud to have belonged to the old company. The captain was busy with some politicui friends and he responded! to the el- thusiutic greeting in o billy man‘s way. VVVVVV 1 L:- a... I'D." new-“I. t. Inn-Ice 0! P field 0' u-uum-r 0- a. o! Iltllo. ‘ rote hung nronnd u Ihongh he would . like to bore' 5 “file. More talk, nnd' finally the captain turned to him with , n show of eordlnllty. and ukcd A low? stereotyped questions. winding up; with ‘llow is the world Inlay 30:17. i What are you doing now? The IKE-E her of the oLd company looked up our- prised. roallud I! once tho! lie had; not been recognlud. nnd sold. with ov 1 mile: ‘1 In: n-ylng to be hover-nor of! 1 Ohio.‘ " . 1 } “Tho! reminds Inc." on!!! the unforg‘: i "of n story they and to tell 0! old 5 Gar. ,‘l‘od, o! wnr Hum. Thu-o ; wasrn prlvue ln one of the Ohio regi- ' menu who exhibited gun! conrngo l and dash It the bottle of Corinth. An ‘, the lines come to elm quarter- the 'contodcute calcium! mo choc dead'nnd' loll with tho flag under him. A young mnn lo the unlon regi- ; men! sprung .for'nrd, tore the flag from (he confederntr'n hondl. otolnfli ! u it was wlth the dead mnn'n blood. . and starred hack to hit own regiment. ,t He win ”we mark at once {or n Enn- . dred rlfln. Ind before he l'rnchrd bin ' own line fell an on the «ruptured eon- . ‘ federate flog. - - ‘4‘ “-He could not finite conceal bi. an- noyntzce at being interrupted. bu uid. perfunctorlly. (hat he wan very glad to see en: member of the old company. dropped the snbjefl. and turned to resume his com-ergmion with his palm“! friends. The pri- rnte hung "out! I: though he would Xike to inve' 5 little. bore talk, end finally the «pull: turneu to him M“: n new of cordlnllty. and Asked I luv stereotyped quutlono. winding up I! _._¢_... nun-Q GOVERNOR um cumin. l‘ .â€".- _. ‘f’l‘here on o stormy. int-ion- aboot him. but he held on to the ligj and. although he had three uric. wounds. he carried book the gallon stained with the blood of the canted.- erate color belt-er and himself. ,' 11.: newspaper: got hold of the. our). on- larged upon the incident. and node a touching appeal for the eoreiy woundâ€" e'd man. who was slowly dying in a hospital. Gov. Tod read the reports, and. moved by a fine spirit of friendli- neu towardthe printe soldier. aent the dying private 1 commission an a captain. This fact won-lac enlarged upon by the newspaper. as u in- stance of prompt recognition of go!- lantfi on the field. . “in the course of months the man, whose one had been regarded no hope- ?ess, recoveredâ€"or recovered sunk-lent- iy to he sent home on a furlough. He still had the governor‘s oommiaflon and hi: note of warm congratulation. and it occurred to him that it would be only right to call upon Gov. Tod and thank him for his kindness and for the commission. which had up to thin time ,,n.‘-_ lull un- u-.- _. and it occurred ‘0 him that it would be nuiy right to call upon Gov. Tod and thank him for his kindness and for the commiwsion. which hid In" (0 till (In. bpen 'ofno benefit to him in the matter a! service or pay. “lie went in believing 1n h ernor would ‘ him. m; “If it gamed to Mn only nitun! thy: tho governor shouid wring up why: In entered the door Ind-greet Mm wifh mm: m M non m3 courts)- muurs mm at {Int-o the executive emu. !n his heart thlt' the gov- ml in some way recognise out wu so exeeptlonal that eonceal bin III- impact“! 30"“! in with n pat-kl “1 air. what ‘en 1 do 1 inst fellow. WM 5“ praised Io! 3“ "‘ mime qua-W 0' he bunt out with: 1 an: the mall W5. fedora" flag at C0! um . cnpuin'loom W M fie wernor ma nah: q! a: all; In an engaged in W:M um ‘lhrcc ”W3 0! mm... 50‘ he turned Impulnfly (and m III. who elm in with I plbfd-flip. to ”yr ‘Well. ctr. what“: I do for you? The gli- het. ooddkd sud seat a cupu‘in'n commission! The gov- ernor looked the Inn over and said on impulse: ‘II n poulfle? Lord blow you. man, I thought you won Kn Heu- en long Igo!’ - - I__I...A 0.. oh. “Th4: can: like. poor (elicit. '50 h greeting from the I “owed his diup’l In looked to grieved and «slid, “It put-nor jumped up. a! to his. and spoke wqrds of nppreeh to. and puke that and: proud: for N. are“ speech. fie aim! at once it the cap- min Ind been stunned to any eon- mnd. The private with a captall'u commission an! be lud not and he -J-_ n- IIIUU- u-s runâ€"-- 7., ' commission all be Ind not. and he asked the'goverlor‘: luterveptiou. Tb. governor Intern-rd. bu: the I]! do- panama} was against hum. and the nun who captured the confederate It; at Dorian: wu dlzchargrd from “It IQ"- ie: an private holding (he govern?! conmiuion .- I Gupta?" , HELEN iniiéit IS A Imam. out. Dun-b I“ III-4. I“ I» 0 . Tim-ct Ian-um undo-t Lite. Helen Miler. flu deaf. dumb gal btind am, his ova-em tremendou- obstacles and In low Wing well as u :tudent n mate‘s-y- an a» chins!- Thé. hulk college wn that (“film Miss Sulllnn, 'l’or were: yes". on tescher. By the employment of sev- eral ingenious lmtnnents the an. tered geometry and alpha. while with mined letter boob she in Q, aim-ed s (yup .01: English. Lett- sud Greek. Ber examination pspen were it: the Brsllle rained polu‘t system end the‘snswen she wrote on s type- .wrlter. In the one of wit ch she is an expert. Besides pining in sll the mulled subjects. like Keller Ill. entered Ledcllle with Mun Euc- lid! and advanced Fm, to the good. i- At the lectpm mien la laverlably iceompanled by )liu Sullivan. txlio' site clone beside her‘uzd gives 'lzer, In the manual lsngtulge. whteter the lutntctur my be saying. The lap on: at he! soelsnd the exqglgiu n- tnre at her thoughts are evidenced W- the essays written during her tlcn. ‘ For all Helen Kelltr's remarkable litellectuallty she lulu the met". just i pleasant. nomnl girl. bhe rides a itandem. sews, erochets. embroider; end. meet Insrvelom of ell. plu: s espuel gun: of chess. e k withâ€" i out doubt the most we rful college ”girl the world has yet eeen. Inna-MI!" Ion." cl I list! In (In Illxll cl Beninâ€"Bundln. Flu-In .1 [43...]... ’ The Inn dklppelfcd bgilnd a monk tainous Inn- of )endenocaloted ciamh which rose rapidly in “at “anthem u C. watery quit-ten. as: J. l‘aygor “up. In the Auntie. To the ennui-d. the. m: sign were (flattening. Sight cam: on ruddefi’ly n It don {II (he no?» ics. Soon the darkam envchped us, - [nimble veil. A who like the much of n mighty hout wag hut-d. wh‘rh proved It) be the approach of I h-opicsl flood. heralded by dup- Is In” I. whales. h churned the It,“ water: :Mo‘a phosphorescent but which "r.- ‘dered the dlrlmeu only not! appur- 'sive. The raln- came do" n it can come only In the Eight of 30133. The .uhnche cooled at. reducing the tea:- perlturedtfn or_lflm 1km (1m: Ills new life. and Rlievi’g our revered blood. I told Mr. Block t‘o throw back the tarpaulin eye! the nth Intel! "M let our ducky friends got none benefit of It. In halt en hour tte nth ceued. but It was u call! and oulnonl u eter. I knew fit: was tint the forerunner at ”nothing to toilow. We Ill. not lone toi 'wait. for suddenly ( hflndtng duh of Ilghtntng darted through the zinc» from as! to wen: followed by one to the opposite direction. Without infer- miutou. one blue utter another. In” thunder era-Mn; at" our eyes were blinded end our cur-deafened. I thou. and than ten thunnd piece: at! us tillery thundered away. We sewed utterly helpless and tmnlfleant “How wondertul are Thy works." can? to my mind. Still no ”“5 the m A Britten-I Iii-0.91:7. A Frenchman bu discovered a rem. Ody instantaneous in in chem for the terrific burnt and by _lhc an of on of vitriol. it It I loft path afrai- cinod maul- nul inter. with trek the pods burned no con-red to 35;! am”: of an inch. It allcvhtu flu pu- d-ont Immediately nil-bu the out. 1. removed so ml- tannins. A STORM II THE TFO? CS 03' . bulk of Igu- puplutlo. In! e was Accomplished under A!» cum-um tunrucflon. aided by Sunk-n, 'for users! yen-I bet he“)! CI! «at blanket to the YO! II. “III Tupi- Sup EM Holin : {tr-I J. "I! ele (). Maura The Ill 'ileph E‘H ()fl

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