Bloomington Progress, Bloomington, Monroe County, 8 September 1899 — Page 2

aMel HuMMitam tfr ot .twti OHMW tsca .1 j If this pM pi wukK toll othora it no-tell tu. EDITORIAL. ill UL , L ' l

rpect doc to themselves, the society in which they wove, and the Nation of which they ace a part. Bat it ia time tha a. custom which tends fees degrade American womanhood! as well as American manhood in the eyes of the civilized world should be checked rather than encouraged by an intelligent public opinion.

Already the betrothal of Miss Julia Dent Urant and Prince Cantacuaem haa eflbctled an eztoae foe a repetition of the nauseating tMspJajr made at tbe time of the Yanderbilt-Marlhorough wedding. An epidemic of sycophancy already afflicts soon newspapers M the Now York World and the

New York Journal Through j Bloomington

their efforts the contagion has seen spread so generally that even bieng covoaeponjloQte in New York bare caught it and are endeavoring to communicate it further. Thus one of them even secured space in last Sunday's In-

tST-Oeean for a column of nonsensc, which, though it never should have seen the hght of day, may servo the good purpose of a bason and a warning. It ia noteworthy that the persona who have become hysterical over the betrothal of Miss Grant seam impressed with the belief that Prince Caatacoaene, by salacting her for his wife, confers an honor upon her. It is quite prob

able that neither Miss Grant nor Prince Cantaonacoe is responsible

for this, but it is certain that the impression could not have become so general bad it not been encouraged by persons from whom we

might expect more common sense

and knowledge of the world. Jn general it may bo said that ao man, whatever his title may he, can confer upon a refined American woman any special boner by asking her hand in marDoge. In particular it should be added that Mies Julia Dent Grant ia the grand daughter of one of the three great Generals of the

eenturv, a President of the Unit-!

DEPKAVITY AND LOVE The word love is often misused. It is sometimes ridiculed, some

times respected and very often

abused. The synonym of love is

affection, friendship, kindness, tenderness, fondues, delight.

Depravity ia vitiated state of

moral character. Its synonym is wickedness, vice, contamination, and degeneracy. We now come to the mutter in band. Last Sunday morning

was startled bv a

murder. A negro who had been

keeping company with a white woman was shot dead at house where she was living. On Tuesday she confessed to having committed the crime and makes a plea for self defense. The revelations incident to the coroner's inquest were revolting enough to turn one's stomach. This female

A Nebraskan Who Rerases to Kejolee. Apparently the whole Stale of Nebraska is turning out to welcome the regiment from that locality on its return from the Philippines. There is one particular Nebraska!!, however, who decIines"to join in this jubilation. This is William J. Bryan. For a short time during ihe war against Spain ho was the titular Colonel of a Nebraska regiment 'stationed in the Southern states. This par-

ticului episode in bis career has dropped out of the recollection of the public. He was the one political Colonel of the war time, and the nominal connection he had with the army was cut by him just as soon ns be decently could drop back into civil life. Bryan is the one Nebraskan who finds nothing to applaud in the conduct of the regiment from his state which has been lighting its country's battles on the other side of the globe, and which has just returned to its home. The scenes at the railway stations in Nebraska when people press around the cars to get a glimpse of the returning soldiers depress rather than exalt Bryan. In his view these Nebraskan soldiers were worse than Leuis XTl's Swiss guards who helped to

bolster up the Bourbon tyranny.

creature admitted her intimacy

with the negro and claimed to be xhey are more dangerous " to the approaching motherhood became j country than were the Pretorian

cohorts of Tiberius and Vitellius,

of this illicit relation. She takes

the hat of the 'dear" departed, whom she helped greatly to shuffle off this mortal coil, and

Kisses n wn ner "cnaste nps, despotism, Bryan believes, who

and fondles it as if it were a deserve to be locked up rather child. She says she loved him, than feted, and weeps, and wails, and cries Arthur Young and Lord Chesaloud in her "anguish". The terfield foresaw and predicted the dead man loved her too, yes, he ' enminrr crauli in Prune af tha

loved her well enough to call ; decade of tho eighteenth cenearly in the evening of the night ltry several years before it took

Xew fJiifflaml Farms. ! Tho thousands of ahandenrd

.'farms of Now England are being!

purchased by people from many countries and nro disappearing. The old farms have n new value. The Portugese, and Italian, and the Canadian is found in almost every community, and it behooves tho thrifty New Engluader to receive his Latin neighbor well, for he has come to stay and vote, and his many children are to vote. The outcome of these changes we cannot foresee. But of one thing we may be reasonably sure, that an honest man can have no more honorable or stable possession than a New England farm on which no mortgage remains, accompanied by the protection of a sum equal to its value in some solid bank. So I would repent, whether in Now England or elsewhere: If you have a farm, keep it ; if net, get one, for the time may come when this country will be largely divided into monopolists, dependent, and farmers, and the farmer will be the most independent of all man and the saving power of our institutions. The relief frost the perplexing problems of the time is a simple' honest, character-building, faith-sustaining life on the soil. The permanency of the New England schools and historical

scenery, and askurea stability of j her manufactories, with a tenden- j

cy to create the finest fabrics, ' the prospective revival of com-!

Two Facts About

It hatt set the standard of quality for all competitors for the last thirty years. The strongest claim any competitor cart make is that his coffee is "just as good as ArbucklesV

THREE CONCLUSIONS

The best Coffee is Arbuckies'. The only Coffee to buy is Arbuckies'. The right thing is to insist on having Arbuckles9.

No. 72 A School ftftg. H Inriio "wldo, 1 lnrhe dtejp, SU f haidsoml cnlr4 nailing. Heat ps)f-14 i recl-t f it seat sr stasay alts' 10 sltvaatares cat from wrmppr of A r buck lex'

i No. 74. No. solos Spring Tap a Moatfurc.

:1ljrlhn hn, .n-'" c

rnnai iw.j. AT. 7 &.ihi It c.nfc?.' J

bf rarrlel iT l'n4 Tft rvriit. onl ; t-sjalif ill

rot-slat sf M", ntai r4 It slsnatairrft -jt ft m rppera of A.;buck! '.'.ml! Vole.

.0

No. 70 Lady's Belt Buekle. "Ilrrr plated aril.tte aealga. Brat pe.tald reeelpt af 9 era! na.taa Mump aaa S atawa lrr fit frem wrapper af Afjarkf' BoeMea OaOw,

No. 7 An Album ef Illustrated Natural History. nrir colons' picture ol Aetatal laglid for tkwr sauty ana ram?. Seat neat-pati rerelpt af 9 at phiki ataatp aa4 ! elaatarea art from wrapper of ArWexl.' Haaarid CoOae.

Ne. 7. Scholars' Companion.

I artlel lor ebal aalldna. Mlfltlr

ClUaadwiioaw a wHk liit aaa kmr, oaa eaa tttltmr, rM a4 niboar. Sal pai palo hi r olpl of ra ooat piilo Mr aii4 IS liMinu mi

traam If Attack)' aot4 OMNa.

1 v

No. 77. Teleoop

-- Drinking Cup. Ho. 73. A FIV Foot ThU artlcl I prTBt4 ro fall' , ic r4irt r tu uutu coDMractlOBi

measuring I npi. . jji UnluM ana lilteir flaibd.

'T ''7

i

I I

V f-m. ; 3m 7 rar, Jj fc-'.et-. fjf? 4T.:.ei :

(I I ne,

I stamp aal IS slsaalnrffl " it rraiil vrpT of ArttuckkM' Toud CaZ. j

JCnie

in

1

no

than

ell

watek

UIsV

4

f a

fctV It aWr. HSTOMSCH. fBl

l.tptia sa rtrtifi mi 's cmm

fe)its sfaatp aa 13 si

mrem ni rnsi wrssasrs sari. as' Ko(4 CoaW

J 1 wan

Iraa7 r-

No. TO. Pepper and Salt Holders.

Mad af oria MItot wltkaat

r JMai aap aaai m a wJ aT. Am mm-mmL

a racotp of ml powos faaip ul IS atoaalaioa om fraat wmpaan of Arkaokla'

caa.

mm

Will noarh

ona ouiici to at potiDd. Hnl bp oz:roaa, ekaraao propaM kru,ti rooarpt of oaac ai Joe aim? tavoo oat from wraapor af Ar. taekM' Koat CoSaa. whoa ar. darlac aana tow

i axprooo o wall a

she killed him with his pockets full of stones, then when he found her he loved her well enough to tell her he wanted to cut both their throats, then they walked out under the trees and made more love. Besides all this he cursed her to prove his affec-

.i i .i t

who inllv Hiot.tml th ,.,.. merce. na me enter

cession to the post of bead of the ,P.ri,M these cendi- j state. TheV are instrunieats of I ".nia England faras j

a iaesi possession, xue Aiifi Enfland farmer who says that I

ui inrni is a taing or tne past is himself but a product of the past. The man whe has a nve-tbouaand-dellar farm in Now England, with five thousand dollars in the bank, and who will lire within his means, is a millionaire, aud bis possession and contentment aro not unlikely to outlast that of the millionaire.

Me. SI Men's Suwpondare.

Klutlo Wok Supa4H0, darabl. Boat, waUawutod. Boat . ISra -otpt af wo

place. Bryan and hi fellowrenegades, who belong to a different order, of course, from Young and Chesterfield, also see times of trouble impending for the United States. The conflict in

j tho Philippines is, in their opin

ion, an unnoly war, in which

ao alaaap a4 le ate aroo cat frosa wrappoi of At-aakla'aoi

No. m Barber Swlnf Strop. dvsbl atroB. onoof lithr aad MO Of OY. boaaA litir. LoarU. BiHia. wtdia, IwalacAai, OtauUaf Dlckal platoL Sapt eaai.pa.IS aa twoali'l ml Par a I paa

p mm 19

oal

of

No. 83 A Table Cover.

ni laiiaii alotk. wat-l

Itk

alotk.

ho, S taikw. Iiai pai pa.ll aa rooolpt of rwa oaal !. taaip u4 U "ta-

Anj wis Boot of ths foKMtag list HI Is sttl sstt-aM

cf a 2 cent posUgt slims ni 10 ttgRttsrcs sit frca th srapptrt if ArksoUst' KssipMI Cede.

No- C4 A OHS HIOHT MVSTefty, aaatwoolkoranatfwwcom

k ttirtt, yj "OLHILICTI." No. rS ADVENTURES OF A BASHFUL BAOHELOH. 7 CUB Aravai &. A mtrtta proToktac Morf. No. C TEMPEST AND SUNSHINE. A XT!.bT Mu VilT J. Ilotux. Tb mow popular ftawlo wrlMr fneUoaof Ikoaca.

No. 07 THE BUNNYS10E COOK BOOK, br ltaa. Jmsxim IUkl.x. Thi I of th ami coaiprikiailTa. naa

frrnM' (. bouxi Tr puaiUBro.

No. C8 OLD SEORETS AND NEW DISCOVERIES. Tbl book

t.kral'i nuliroul of ih fcoua traefca of kaowwaio. aoa wlU kt f.uad both attrlatatng; and naaraL

No. M THREE THOUSAND THINOS WORTH KNOWING, T k. Iliwu. -'.bor ( "Muni CntTorul Aaalnaat." TfcM bosk ! aaaryclaxlaof blfblf uaFftlarrBiatla lacadooaad form.

f,N. BO THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIQHT, aid otaar Olorlo

n,J by HvaTAkB KirLiaa.

Tho First Prayor.

-3- 1 A boaulUia ffL iBipotiaC 'Vl rtetarouaat lock ia 1 JiSlM poai.palS f aflXl aa rooofp LOfTrV of a ooat atVrlStJu HmbL aiaarp mmm Hi v eoe V r laroa oat fma wrap.

or of ArBBekMa' BiaMtod. Cot

Ne.oa ITho First Ulee

President McKinley is a more re

actionary George III, and Aguin-

tion and goes away to return early the next morning with a shot gun

ne naxt borrowed all to prove nis ido . nohW (.rrrA WuKins.

love. Then he met his death at j tn. The condemnation which the hands of this loving and be-) iitt, Powoall and the other Brit, loved creature, and she is placed frion,iB f liberty heaped on in jail to answer to the lawandjtho niiutry of Lord North is society, what such love as hers!rathr Sudatory compared with means. This cn-ature in woman's tna feelin which Bi van and the

form ia said to have two children, ' rest 0f the connorheads entertain

what a pity, and keeps them with toward the administration in

ad' Starts,, and as such the peer of j her. Truly, Satan himself must , Washington for its action in defendsay monarch o earth a man ' !mrPrid thc ioD o , ing American authority in AmerwWandKinaliketki: m p territory. When whole state. - .. on love this is. It is more. is tnrn out to j0 honor to soldiers pleasure in meeting as ial a profanation of a sacrtid theme. If ih. Phiim,,, -.r e.itnr.

Ta, 1 - 11. . .1 j'Ia.1 ' .....

xi is & uivsuirun- urarin in nun . nn 1 a. .. a. t r. ' I .

eqnal, whose name and fame are stamped indelibly on the minds of hamaaity, sad whoso deeds are eenbiazoaed on the pages of bwtery. At the forthcoming wedding the grand-daughter of Ulysses S. Grant cannot possibly re-ceire-any bettor st great as that ifBioH is hers by birthright. It Mquires only a superficial knewl edge ef Russia's social life to irarraat the statement that the next Prince Cantacuzene will point with more pride to his great-grand atber oa the American aide than tb any paternal aneestor that ever aVed. Only an ignorant fop eeuld see si the Grant-Caniacozeoe onion anything which weald add in the least to the dignity or distinction of the bride. It will not improve aer social standing kt the least to share the title of her future boasand. Russia baa any nootber of "princes," some of them wise svd.seeaeof them foolish; some of them rich and distinguished, and seme of them neither; some o tbem possessing the formal at fHbntes' ef titled' nobility, and some of tbem Jar below the social standing of- tbe English or AmerioSBVeoantry gentlennn. But in this century- Koasia has had no tflyaoos Sr. Graary-aHpaVm' tbe last Mro generations the world has Had only one to compate with Bim. It would berweil'if the tuft-hunters who at present are prostrating tawmeelves in Newport sad in Sew York esoM be breoght to a mnlizatien of these fserfc as wwTI as to an appreciation of the condition that an American gentleman is the social equal of any gentleman, that he is- aeeentedi a such

&V Ein-encaa society, and that hisj

position in Europe is also the po

sition of his daughter, prori

Belgium's Socialists are again ' threatening the government of I

that country. The disturbance!

which they caused a few months !

ago created a fear that a revolution was imminent. The sotiilists arc growing rapidly in all the

countries of Europe, even in England, although they do not yet figure prominently as a distinct party iu the latter country. Europe's Socialists aro often called by American writers the Populist of the Old World, but this characterization is unjust to tho Socialists. These, unlike our Populists, comprise many of the

ablest men in their respective countries. The grievances which they have are real. In most cases tbe leinetlies which they propose are wise. Of course, the ultimate aim of most f the Socialists of the nations of continental Europe is the establishment of a

this object is

openly in recent

years as it was once. What the Socialists of Belgium ask for is manhood suffrage. This prevails in Germany for the election of

the members of the Keichstag, and

in e ranee for tho election

- -1 II liMXli A

i pon or ao-

e. Two Is Company.

I TkaarMaal

l paaMM

rrr

il

br

Mama. Thi

voproaacllaa la It BctaUan I

a fflnvlno work of an BUI ItSdi K tack.

pais aa rooolpi of two laaia aaS IS abaa-

naa onapajta) at Arkaokl' aoaototf

No. 94. A Basket of Beautlea. A BucBiaroat plctur of by rut il ! Lsagpr. tbo groat patntr of Jlowera. Wo ' aUT tbl u kt of Ik baadHiarat i

flowor aletarM T4r ttttiTtA to tho kmV.

w ItltiUS lnrhn la ilu. rnl paat-paM aa rooolpt f 3 roat pootaaa ataaap aa 1C ataaataraa rat robi wrappna of Ac kackMa' Moanotf Cobo.

No. 85 Threo Beautiful Flower Picture.

i Kacb mil turing tSx!7 lochm. Th HUM ar . " Bamnur Frat-raac," A Van of I JIM." aaa '. "Pmk aa 8t," ' Than Ibm ptetaro all ; go togotbr, aad will bo ! aoa paat-paM aa ra colpt af 3 cowl pot

Il ; aaa naaf mam m

aaiaaaa vm mn wna or f Arbuckl'

KootMd roOM.

No. BO.

A BwaagotH. wawHrla

I

Noah'a Ark.

of It pain of

rWpbaaw. CaaMla, Soar, Rof,

Cattlo, Poak7. OoaM, Uaa. Bara.Tlfai. Data aa4 Cat. Sack pair 1 coapbMl aaC Mali aloao. Tkop oro Btaaiiaakrt la aaaar color oa kaaoy cardboard, cot oat aad aaiboaMd. TOT7 ftatDi af too Aalanl I dKUactlr oaowa. Tba oloplaajua ar T lack klk aad l lack too, aad tbo ot hoc AbIbuK an praaarHoaattr largo. Sam 11 paid aa roootp ofSaaat p-aataaw tmiap uwd IS ateaatatwa aa fraax

wrappon of Aibaiktot' Bum 1 0Bt.

Ho. 7. Blghty-ono Oeld IjoU Noosilos.

(!tah. hraiikn. Ppnnsrl.

what is most noble in true man 1 Hn,l otht.r xtatB Mni no-

ami womanhood. Love! HowtjjwSo limes, the davs of tho dare they speak of love These republic, as tbe "anti-imperial-degenerates. How dare they igt9" look at affairs, can not be

charge to love their miserable long jn the land. Hulding those i republic, although

nation ana its tragic ena: it is ; Mntiments nobodv will be sur- not avowed so

the province of love to shield, to ; prj,ea tnat this particular Neprotect, to fondle, to caress. No : braskan who has been mentioned person who lovea another will i .t out of Nebraska ami started even wound the feelings of the ; for the Pacific coast just as soon loved one. So sacrihoe is too a. the Nebraska regiment reached great, no danger too exposed, no the state line coming home. Seltrouble too severe not to bo over- en, s;nc, tne jayg 0f Ahasuerus come by love. Yet these creatures and Philip Nolan has the world talk of love. What a burlesque . Mn , more abject political outit all is. Society at large owes a cast than William J. Bryan is at duty to itself and future genera-' this moment, tions to stamp out such "love" asj . , this. Call it depravity, vice, j WaatofKospoet ror tlio Hoopcorruption, degeneracy or any j - , po e" of its other synonyms but do not j A Chicago Tribune reporter in call it love. Love if sacred and j writing ap the spbinx-cdncss of viceia hellish, itiis murder is 1 Senator Beveridge said that when certainly not sacred, consequently j Ret into tn hoop pole comit must be the other. Blooming-! monwaalth he will still be silent. ' ' ington must rid herself of anv ' There is an insult iu that eombisociety to whom vice is love, and nation oi Bop P0'9 uA P,it -the strong arm of the law must fimtives to tbe sensative Indianbe invoked to teach such creatures Are th"y b" taunted by that depravity is not love, never reR87 lard makers and packwrs and never will be. rs of pigs' feet in Chicago with

I I aar I tr

hMi $m

Pal ap la a

ar-

af 9 ooat UK olaaap aad 90 akraaIirti oat from wrappar af At-baekl'

Cof-

Mo. 98 Hair Pin Cabinet A sutal tax UtbograpbM ta color, coolalDloc On HUDdnd Hal i'lLlM. Moactod claia and atriot; tralgbt, crimplod aad iaTlalbl. TU dincnot tlaa ar ta oparalc compartatanta. Saat pootpid an roootal of J coat pcataco olaatp aad IS alaaatarca cut from wirappar of Arkackloi' Baaatod CoOt.

A Pocket Mirror

and Comb

8t la Mt I'

oomMDatloa com, wttk whit aiotal fraan.

Saat put ild oa.

rooolpt of 9 aaat

j poataao ataaap aaa

T aisaanraa cat rreaaj wrapper of Arbucklot'

atewtedOaS,

Caatalaa twaatj-loor

Safatr-ria tar iIbob wkkk oalm a aki aida kaa tllli

ao wbaa balas

paat-paM lam rooalpt af

oaatpa

atapap aad S olaaararaa cat fros wrapper af Arbucklo' Bnarwd CoSH.

TM t a pMf f ta Wf atrar oa SrfcacklM' BtiHaf CtSo Wriooor, wklck ?aa r t aal oal aa t a a

Star part at lb CM nor aHU a aoeorto a a

aaata?. BtraiS tta PMara M

Bonnd packaaa of Arbocklea' Roaatad Coffoe, and with

Daekaca In wblon tba utt 1 Ibua u pa rem

Thi roprofnt osa pago ot a Llit which ia found la

Ulatl 10 arl

tram tha List, anbjoot only to too aondltlcn tba tho olcnaatra

'Btaoro.

daaolta taut of aoma artlcl to bo alecMd j hlai

b eb or ora iwitTwm ab rani

an tba naekaa-a at to bo cat oat and returned to Arbuok

ai a voucbor, in accordance with tb direction printed In connection with oaah Item lllaetralad and deecrlbed In tba UH. Tbl Lilt will be kept gmm amir UI Mao- SI. SOBB. Hoothar

' tola lAtn win appear in una paawr aiwaiix.

AMrtss all ceunlo.tlt tt ARBUCKLE BROS.,, MOTION DEPT., NEW YORK CITY.H. Y.,

members of the Chamber of Deputies, thc popular branch of the Parliament of each country respectively. Belgium's Socialists for the time being are weakened by the withdrawal of the Liberals from their support. Nevertheless, the eventful accomplishment of their present purpose seems certain.

America Brldro Builders In In the roll of honor named bv

aV I rf EaTJPt- ;tho President of regiments that It was a graceful tribute which j voluntarily overstayed their time Gen. Kitchenei' paid to American in the Philippines, Indiana had engineering ability iu his spcoch no full regiment, but there are

of : at the opening of the bridge over many Indiunians among the regu

Veterans at Phlladelpbia. President McKinley dees well this year in taking a few hours away from official duties and reviewing the veterans assembled at Philadelphia. The President lately has been reviewing the younger veterans of a later war.

hoop poles and the preservation

of the art that binds, with an industry that along with fence rails, was a large section of the foundation on which our religious and literary pre-eminence rest? The hickory sapling and the thrifty oak, marketed as hoop poles, rails and clapboards, sent tho pioneers to college and gave ns

It makes quite a difference whose I Af c- rh1ov h shou ox is sored. Here is Governor Mc j rl K"t far from their home, in Millin of Tennesiee, formerly one j th- hot.tos mouth of the year, and of the most ardent advocates of i depending upon tho labor of f.,r

States' rights, opposing the proposi-j aiiTDer8tion that trusts shall bo iuvestieat- i Peneoyd Iron works

ed bv states and insisting that dolphia

the work shall bo undertaken by

tne Atbara river, a tributary of lars, ot wh'm tbe president says: ths Nile, in the Egyptian Soudan. "To tbse must be added about This bridge, Gen. Kitchener said, four thousand eulistedmen of the is a monument to tho euergv of regular army who were entitled

the American bridge builders, and to tbeir discharge under the peace to their ability to turn out works proclamation of April 1, 1899,

oi magnitude in less time ttisn tho greater portion or whom par-

anybody else. congratulate! ticipatcd in the engagements of

the Americans,' ' said the hero of J thc Eighth Corps and are still

Omdurman, "on their success in performing arduous services in the

the erection of a bridge in the held.

But the arrant events of an earlier

and more critical atrurle are not'w fir8t croP of lawyers, teachers

tc pass from memory even for aiwl Methodist preachers. Time time. Only a comparatively small ; to dwell upon the barrel proportion of the American public ! heops that Indiana supplied to the mar ho ram-rafted in Phi U.el-'. distillers and pork packers of

phia to-day, but wherever in the country the veterans' reunion shall bo mentioned it will be with words of sympathetic fellow-feeling and good-will. In attending the reunion the President not only performs a pleasant duty as a veteran, but obeys tbe tacit wishes of the people of the United States, by whom the Grand Army of the Repuhiio is held in high regard for what

ded I BKaaberBhip represents.

owlyvsife posses the attributes of j horse can draw on the worst Afined Ammcan womanhood, j earth read about four.

neighboring states until the sub

stitution of a miserable iron hoop drove the cooper's horse to tbe kindling pile and huug up the drawiug knife for aye. We neglect, it is to be feared, the hickory sapling, the ornament of tbe log school bouse, tho stimulator of ideas in the upper end of the lazy school boy, the bannor, as it were, that inado the great political processions in tbe flaming campaigns of Clny, Harrison and Van Buren look as if again "Birnamood do come to Dunsinane." What a titling: emblem of

His plain title of mister is the times as much as be can carry ou tawdfict of as honorable a nation- liiatSaKk. n a good macadamiz- ! tradition ao that, oft lord; or iWJ he can pull ten time iw

i m . i

I nve times as niuco;

the national gorernraont. An mvestigaties of the trusts in Tennessee by its governor, Mr. McMillin, might be an unpleasant duty and have a disagreeable effect in its relation to his political ambitions for the future.

kike. or prince, or baron.

baa but to live up to it to be re-1 xsvtl fiftr-eirrbl times as macb

oognized in fact, as well as in the- anBawaawaBaawawaw ry, as the njsetv f ao wms on ' A score of cities in the United eeetUf and tb assure correspond- j States boatsof tbeir rapid growth, ... a a. a 1 Ws9 td9 aklll tlfrA OttTtatS tt fA rrfAaV.

in ibMvxmitinn to nia cbildrcn. "' " f,-

It iv not a pleasant duty

liuliaua's best qualities- is the hoop pole, product of tbe sapling, progeny fif the noble hickory. Lut uo s icker streak couuiiit-l-

and'on a stTeet ' ae ,,00I F"" common -: t. imm onwn-

weaitn, ior wo an it. j i "

There are a whole lot of people who waut tbe newspaper to help boom the business of the town, provided the editor will do ail the writing, make enemies, get licked and pay the expense of doing it. They only appreciate the power of the press when it is turued against them. Kockpert Journal. An incident occtired during tbe President's stay at Pittsburg which had some significance. An English lady called on him, accompanied by her little son, and the latter saluted the President as "William the Conqueror." Tho President laughingly declined to accept that title, and said ho would rather bo known as "William the Liberator." That is what he is in Cuba and Porto Rico, and what be will he iu- the Philippines as soon as the insurgents show sense enough to lay down their arms and accept tho proffered fiioiulship of tiio

nacity for outdoing

in Egyptian territory.

It is estinia-

J ioc- just as rapidly.

teat that ut tht- Jtvsmit, ratn- of

.1 - - . -. 1 - 1 . - ' ...

ao3iitwwaiCT bo pinuiiy. . growth London, which

A bad' boy seldom gets his badness from his father. Tbe old uian usually hangs on to all he has.

now

ft afowi$noS be necessary to ic-' a population of 5,657,000; wil Aind-any Ameriesu eitizens of thoio 14)41, hare over. 18)00,000-

An eminent scientist advises as a precaution against tuberculosis and several other germ diseases, that the mouth be kept closed. This suggestion should come into ceneral practice, and if it fails to

...

All efforts of politicians to array class against class or section against section should be frowned

down by tho people regardless of

,.f Ph;i,.. parly. Nothing is more danger-

w . LI:.. .1 ..1 J

..irl the contract in mua B re.muuc tuu u, uu

Att-anul hsitt.dl Thnv a fan fiiiYt

...o;... n-mmtid v fyr thn raoc. -vw -v.. u.a. mvi

irthst it wouhl ; agree to com-, f Th,ll , .i.. .i.... :.. . ..kj.. should bo no such thing as a

plate tne swuuuww in a num u-i . ,. , . time that, any British firm would "la" recgmd in a free complete it. Americans are grat-:un,ry- JJ8" th .PP1ified to know that the work has m"" ro thi 8S Pw been finished in a manner entirely , d V thf Sern- " . . . .,. :,, ment just what they please. To satisfactory to the . 8ay that all the law..re made by the contract. It wa r. "(.. few and aH the wcalth eoatrtyl s:tide,3

British firms cv ,u? l"D j "F",

majorities is 10 say mar. popular rrovoruuient is a failure and the

" i people unable togovern themselves. Londoners are complaining lf this io true) tno sooner we call terribly of the heat, which has a kino. ,,t. letter. If it is not seen up to 90 in thc niiddlo of the ! true jt is a c, lVtt0 to constantly day a good many times this sum- j mying it and endeavoring to create mer. They seem to consider it ci,s8.hatred and all the woes that no mitigation of their misery that comc frotn jt tha mercury drops to $0 degrees and below in a night. Under The honor oi France is fast these circumstances Americans being vindicated in the Dreyfus whose nights aro but little less ! exposures and be it said to the tropical than the days will bo sloty : honor of the nineteenth ceatury to admit that Englishmen have that no great wrong, such as his anything to complain of. The J couriction seems to have been, only way in which Americans can .could be kept under cover by even endure it is by reflecting that, stub a strong force as the without hot nights there would be military domination of France has no corn crop, and without a coi n j shown iisulf to be. It only emcrop there would be Populism. 'phasiaes tho fact that there Howevei, no that corn is out of, is a great power for rightdanger of frost a fall in the tcni- eousncss in tho world which

1 peraturo would seem timely, can not lie suppressed, and that Neither humanity nor corn rea retribution overtakes the evil doer 'needs 9!) in the shade- iav Sbptem-; sooner or later.

her.

Knitin v,., , v, t a ttnnn the Sia ItHa t H

has so holy that they don't work any prevent tuberculosis it may inei-

for throe days before or three days; prevein u-. utm.... Bftcr that are quite ns Wad.

A Bcbool inspector finding a

" ! class hesitating over answuiung A smokeless coal ia pruuiised tho question "With what weapon very abertly. It is made of 93 dii Sampson slay the Philistitpssf" per cent, of coal aud dust aud ,ntl wishing to prompt them, sevou per cent, of caustic lime, significantly tapping his own uheek The latter inistiire forms a bright- he asked: "What is this!." The

! burning gas, and thus prevents whole class instantly answered:

the genoratiod of smoke "Tht jaw bone of an sss."

The Man of the Hour. A Magnificent Portrait of . . Admiral Dewey

. . in Ten Colors . . size, 14x21 inches. will be published by us shortly. It is now being printed for us on heavy platepaper, in a form suitable for framing, by one of the largest art lithograph houses in

America, in thc famous French style of copper-plate work. . Kvery American family will want one of these handsome pictures of Admiral Dewey. It must be remembered that this picture will be in do sense a cheap ehromo, but will be an example of the very highest style of illuminated printing. It will be an ornament to any library or drawing-room. Our readers can have the Dewey jHirtrait at what it coats us (namely tVn emt per copy) by merely filling out the coupon below, and sending it to this office at onv. There will be such a demand for the portrait when it is published that we advise sending orders in advance. As many copies as may bo desired ean be had on one coupon, providing rn vwA is sent foe mch copy. Write name and address plainly, and remit in coin or postage stamps.

To THE REPUBLICAN PROGRESS, BLOOUISGTOX, IXDIAXA. Tot the enclosed remittam'i' of cents send me

copies of tbe AUM1KAI. ifct- i-wmtiAii iu colors, aeaenooa in

to-day's paper. Name

Dati.

AddreM.

-JOB PRINTING H The Difference in Cost

Between Job Printing that is "thro wed together ' and gotten out in a haphazard way is but l;tl leas than Job Printing gotten out in tii-ss-nt-' style. The former does your butdnesa injury and the lattr gives tone and character to your business. Herein the difference U great. We supply Fine. Printing that will boom your Irtisiu and tf which yon will be proud, for it will attract attention.

The Republican Progress