Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 11 November 1889 — Page 2
/.
A
THE DAILY NEWS.
VOL. I -, ,.. .NO. 83.
FubllsHed Every Afternoon Except Sunday,
—by tub—
communication*.
1*he column* will be open to
torn upon Aoy subject of special
Specimen copies*
Where
been
*1
'f
delivery i*
lrrr*ular,
Immediate
com-
KemHtancv* »hoald te awuk payable to THK sell nor ior any one NF*VH PCBUSH IN*
COMPANYUOUOLAH H.HMITH. Managing Editor.
«fW TttUsnfojifc No. 5«!. Mf R«a(kr» of the Junv
Nkw»
r?ity Hi Any tljftc p»!i H«ve thu p»ier ^mailed to thftin. Addrew wl! nircd.
tmHering
cbiu»K**l otuia Mde-
pnbiir,
who
look at a millinery revolving, perpe! it:i a weeklv (taper for aj instance Plar,(1
Yon must K"
in
consensus ol the news, or after the dadies had overworke*l themselves trying iind out who *hot bniketrian Crews, the Mail comes out with the startling information that he hung himself. If a paper which is entirely edited with the seinsor* is thus prone to error, much must he forgiven those which are compelled to furnish live news with no time for verification.
and the
Tut: musk rat and the goose thick-skinned apple and the other proph- jt jfi)
being as unreliable as the weather bureau. Here it is almost Thanksgiving and not enough cold weather to stillcn the ground, although a
severe
predicted
It seems a little odd to read that the Church of Kngland has compelled all of her clergy who own brewery stock to sell it. It is not an exaggeration to say that there is not a minister of any denomination iu the Cnited States who would think of owning a share of brewery stock. Thin is the case partly from a matter of principle and partly because public sentiment would not permit it. The Church of Kngland enjoys a supremaev similar to that of the throne, because it is not accountable (o the }eople. This
any •lenomination, either rrotestant or Catholic. KeiitfsoiiM dmnirmtion is the
worst of all dr^pousms, and the ^ople
at hnyv miwl pprBilttwl the
imii\-iiluitiitv ami !mkkw in irlininua as
r,,K
HtoiJ at Chicago took a re«t yt^tenbiy at* 1 contain otters of tllletl many
of
rmik jsirty, «hich i* not
the pulpits in that city, daughter,^
Hostilities will commence strain this: i:»» .. sopen raritament in morning, the I rohibUmn a {art of
all of which indicated hat thete two or-
ihIwwiu
gW*.lyal.,mv,.ica1.|.nk in their ,.lat-
form tbat
would giv« mtm bk*
of what
they neatly ox poet t* atvomplhb, how they hopc to bring it «lx9t.
Tne reports in regard t« tho application for liquor Hcinwe by i«vi Morton «h»10coutnuntictory to bmiSeP.it
lii*
cult 10 get at the tmth. The m«rt |m» bar feature of the affair the *t*k and oh&enre denial* the lie pub!ban pirn The wnlradsctkm of Mr. Morton's prs vate mvr&tety mat tfrst looked «po« a*
oonvindiqr. Thin, ba«fW| *rm lniMi
by a telegram from H. B. Moulton, of Washington, to the National Convention of the W. C. T. U., declaring that the license hail been issued to the manager of
AN IN DEPENDENT NEWSPAPER, jMr. Morton's hotel. This was
c,
immediately succeeded by one from
A etUeton
wag
11 is said that, since the opening of the l'aris exposition fully a dozen men have lost their lives in the elevator of the Kiflel tower and tliat during its construction a number of workmen were killed, but these facts concealed from the public. must have an enterprising set of news- I'm ted States, the President of the Senpaper reporters in Paris. The failure to «t«s a man of hitherto unblemished eharseeure such items as these would cause aeter, has been deliberately vilified, inthe discharge of a reporter on any tsrst- suited and disgraced in the eyes of the claw newspaper in the Tinted States.! world, his traducers are a shame and a Hut then the reporter as a "hustler" is a peculiarly American institution.
saying that the charge
without
VI7U7Q IT I CO I Shortly after the reading of this telegram, NEWS PUBLIbMiiNO ^U-Mex.Gm.ernor.Ljoim took the platform PUBLICATION- OKFK and stated that he had just come from
No 23 South Fifth Street. Washington, that the manager to whom ___— Morton had leased his hotel had applied Ttrmof&ibmipium for a liquor license and his application Ou«7«ur 1 was signed by Levi F. Morton and John lvr week, by carrier,
.lOeta
I*04/"1!
U»r«at. No communication Inxpiral of mjr inz or of personal nature will be published. jn
furnish***!
upon
a shadow of foundation.
It. Mclean, proprietor of the Cincinnati
Enquirer.
Ait cnrrc*jK»n'i« w»hoaM V^iM]dre«ed to afternoon and this morning the papers STKWH POBUKHJN'i COMPANV No Attention will given to an non mo a*
prominent in
the firg|
application.
Washington, say
pig,^
injected man uicerf pt will not be returned on-1 Morton lc«* accompiuiic«l by postage. granted Mr. Morton. Person* lesSrSn« to *ub«--rSi/e for the Newscan •. In the second place, no application do by nek-phone or po*ul card request j. Mr. Morton.
no
license has been
3. in the third place,
plaint sii'juid be niadc at th* office and it will igjgugi| no application for license for himmmive prompt attention. 1
lb
Mn\ DA V, NOV KM BKK-11, 1S8S). a man cannot get a drink unless he also This would show that a 1 takes a meai. A c.ji.i, of fiw ef oii is said to sober a |j{ar.n8c hag been taken out. man in a very few niimiU'S. He would jrl regard to the moral aspect of this have to pretty drunk to take the anti-1 ease
dote. the i«st class of |eople. For the Vice
are weary to death would
of paying a dollar and a half a ticket to
MVirtnn has
Mr.
Morton has
in the house. Id the fifth place, the proprietor u,ld me that he did not intend to have a bar.
The very latest credits the manager
w{th t|tat th0se
t}iere
1m*
gmnent
a national disgrace. Any ar-
from a financial point of view
exhibit built on ti that might apply to a private individual motion plan. would lw entitled to no consideration in the «-ase of Mr. Morton. He has been
iu
n('xt
U) Um
i,.u,1h
ets are keeping up their reputation for morality. Hut aside from the principle involved, it does not seem possible that the administration would commit so colossal a political blunder. 1 he Republican
winter has
ever since the dog days.
The coal dealers feel that this is especially uniust, in view of the fact that this is the last winter of their absolute and
ll,K,1('hl p0"|i
Uition possible to an American citizen. The death of the President would put I him at the head of more than sixty mill-
ions of people. W bile it is true that our government receives an immense revenue from the manufacture of intoxicating liquors, yet the moral sentiment of the ju'ople would never tolerate the taint of thin tratlic upon their chief executive. This is possible in foreign countries but not in this, which weak and halting
the world in abstinence and
party is managed by the shrewdest politicans in the country. They would never jHTinit such a mistake as this which would contribute largely to their defeat when next they went before the Ieopl\
no condemnation too severe for its originators. This is a matter which should were he considered entirely outside of a partiiThey Ibins. If the Vice-president of the
wprcmch to the party they represent.and
should be universally repudiated and
barred from further service.
AT HOME AND ABROAD. THK nKSERT UKK.
iwl pltv I he hoari untouched by tears Jim! pltv the rye* thro are never wet Hv tho *lghl of another'* woe.*or fears, ity tho scout of rose or mignonette— Tender nnd faint a* a eong: that MitoU* The of heav'n from thrush's throat. Yet strong enough to lxar and llmt A hcaty Hoit! o'er tin- v*ni-led years To some dear memory atovo It set The immortelle* of a vatn restretTesonie smalt grove hy which we know The sad, sweet peace of death and oe, ud |ltv the life
that
I* withered and dry
From fro*en heart and de*ert eye. The Children.
sa one thing that the Tniled Statm must business hours. All the other members powder, his hair and beard burning, and
mmImI
lio"'
hurt
reeourees, »^mhiniug and morality (|,0 i^teen. with Ute shrewdest tai tics of the wire-1 Lionel J. H. ^tevensn, who cornpnlling jwditician, Francis AVUbml mandtnl the bower California expedition
takes the phitu. The third party {M-ople has UH?ome contirmeil ''first-nighter. aectiM1 Ihe u«n-partisan element of being in the hire of the Republican# and the latter chatgv? the former witii re-1 wiving j.ay smm Uie V'mocratj*,
for\« of srrumsdat l^oeta and women
temieraii4. A WwUd^rra public would fW 1 **'WI
xh ii
I
gtianl ngiuivsi an establbh^l chtmdi of of the Cabinet indulge cgan, large pieces of flesh hanging from hislj^^ byTslier at 1 1
•r i. h" [f*
aa
vu iv«m
1
It o.«
tiiv 'vi
uiuiiti? in
j" luatmKi ilg coti I! ions. ill h? lie the I he »Wit hi. «Mh
111*7
vuou
A bl|J|t of oorRe
mm
iv
i^iiament
Jltnrj Stsnlfj'* Ww».
wjth
tmn bat ions hoi,I the fumb and therefore man's inteiise^ rnggi^lness, plainnem. di the contod, The rrohibitioubUi font the Hepubbcims to a»lopt temj^eranw measure* in oeicr to hold that elemcut of their jvirty. and then they put up their own io draw the tcml^eram:» voto awav froitt the Kepublt* nuw and injure a victory for the I*emo*
1
men, not women, and it is the
reeiuw* that "«ve «vntm^l by ^«?er 5
an
my
am
tn
aa
mitdi 4 a bj
i^vrite
Mt 1
TERBB HAlil'K HA1LV NMg
JEFFERSON'S YOUTH.
Mow ii coin Saved the Great Artor'a Father from Financial Knln. Spingfield being the capital of Illinois, it was determined to devote the entire season to the entertainment of the members of the Legislature. Having made money for several weeks previous to our arrival here, the management resolved to hire a lot and build a theater. This sounds like a large undertaking, and perhaps with tbeir limited means it
AH this occurcd on Saturday temple erected. heavymeaismorning^oon andevening, Thr huildinB-of a theater in those days there is a night suptRr, more or xess
.. ming or refilling, this mechanical con- over the wholesome point. i. 'ln the fourth place, there is no bar
trivance
who boanl at the 'Old 15oy's private gosometer
|cafei»n have liquor with their meals but The new theater, when completed
,rannot be two opinions among
was about ninety feet deep and forty
the fathers of the church not only
IIIIIVI I KllVVtl
this whole story is a political canard manufactured for campaign purposes. Should this prove to be the case there is 1 in Springfield. a*id was honored and be loved by all who knew him. and. after the time of which 1 write, he held ra'«her an important position in tin* Uovernment of the 1'nited States. He now lies buried near Springfield, under a monument commemorating his greatness and his virtues—and his name was Abraham
,,'u
was made to sink \mder the in America it is not the amount—alstage. I believe if the theater, or though our women as a rule with their ••devil's workshop," as it was some- sedentary habits use too much, especialtimes called, had suddenly been illu- ly
We had hardly reached the building
Secretary Rush smokes a pipe during when a man came out of it covered with followed by an
^jifirrvvs huu um
gtrH
atniettr to me SvU, ven unlike at ,t least that I have seen 1, the rnde type of!
,,lion
0
ab-y.atetV uueomferta* ,T..,-TT.t)ri. ,ir „m ,n „„^mnn,
mme. Ik I can talk
Htecu
In
1
fn nill hn fn rt em \nvAt» ttMll I nrffn
to lead the tiermans tn his district, charred and his face partly burned. ..
uivv
|jv|aK graltt*U ot llarvanl. lias 1kn?ii hlni and failed a name I did notcatch. P.
u«ti
ti
to the lihrarv of that inatiln- ItweivinK no answer he went right back
.. ...»«... .»d I..«.. I
•r. 1 ... |. f" I"? T", "TO" friars, who, with bare heads and san-
'1 1««»«? «y.twny of jr h,d. I ehlld. ajrir of Ms or wven. I hose
umiiivu. n.i<p></p>Ashe
Bancroft, the oldest reached the sidewalk he looked around JJJLcabie sort is thT^next that we™^-
marriaRe with Ins nearesthim heard Inn) say: ,.,isla, are oft on a begging eipSiition, ... ...• ifr' hoping to return with theii Franciscan lar.lNill?lnry»«ntS ()ueea Victoria to are hurt. While the poor little
person. I hia thing kept saying: "No. papa. 1 am not, monasterr's fare Presently a ar,«l mighl burt. not at a II: von are burning, think I ibelr
4
of yourself, and vet tho blood was
The little anecdote of Carlyfe related
•'For the life of me, I cannot sit still a Vwkshire College ia said to be char-. with ready wit reads a suitable moment when anything approaching to acteristic of its hem It. appears that sample of the contents of bis book: love com«« on the tapis. 1 have lived
man
onp moTVking U)
and couid not, because the rest of the congregation were owing him for their subscriptions."
*s-as. ^HABITS OF FRENCHMEN.
One Respect in Which They Enjoy an Advantage Over Americans.
The habits of life, so far as regards eating, are better with our Parisian. England and America both transgress, one in the quantity, the other in the quality, of the food. The Briton feeds
1 fancy that my fa- too heavily. He becomes plethoric and
taOT^herlShrank from this bold en- beefy. The exquisite rose tints on his terprise, but the senior partner (Mc- daughter's che turn to patches ol Kenzie) was made of sterner stuff, and harsh color on face of his wife, and his energy being quite equal to bis am- his own rubicund visage suggests bition. the ground was.broken and the chronic congestion. Not content with
wrv. not yet acknowlidged as a fact drunk and cofTee and a vast amount of by the unscientific '.vorld in the ^est strong ale and porter which all serve to a second-class quality of sperm- induce more appetite for solid food. A oil was the height of any manager man can eat two slices of bread or meat imbition. The footlights of the best with a glass or a cup of liquid accomtheaters in the Western country were paniment, where he could use but one composed of lamps in a "float" with the without. So the effect is apt to be ex-counter-weights. When a dark stage cegg—certain excess over the necessary was required, or the lamps needed trim- amount of nourishment, probable excess
at
minuted with the same material now in food which makes the national deadly 'ise, itn enemies would have declared that the light was furnished from the
feet wide. No attempt was made at or- fortunate stomach can sustain the innamentntion. and as it was unpainted, jury done it by lack of proper nourishthe simple line of architecture upon ment, it succumbs to the habit of boltwhich it was constructed gave it the ap- ing. Meal time is a succession of gulps pcarance of a large dry-goods box with
8elf
and
launched forth against us in their ser- vivid a picture for the better knowledge mon.s, but by some political maneuver
and
*ot the city to pass a new law enjoining certainly is not so for the country disheavy license against our "unholy" tiricts, and it is these last which produce calling: 1 forget the amount, but it was the people. Towns may be the nerve large enough to be prohibitory. Here ganglions, but the country supplies their was a terrible condition of affairs—all force. our available funds invested, the Legis- The Parisian has changed all this. lature in session, the town full of poo- He begins the day with the slightest pie, and by a heavy license denied the I possible breakfast, leaving mind and privilege of opening the new theater. body cleared, not weighted for action.
In the midst of their trouble a young After three or four hours' work has mlawver called on the managers, lie had duced a healthy demand for food there beard of the injustice, and offered, if comes a dainty and plentiful meal two they would place the matter in his or three courses of meat, with a few veghands. to have the license taken off. de- etables, an omelette, bread and butter, claring that ho only desired to see fair fresh or prepared fruit. This answers play, and he Would accept no to our lunch, and is usually served at fee whether he failed or
succeed-
ed. The case was brought up before comes dinner. Soup always, often fish the council. The young lawyer began four or five delicate and inviting prepahis harangue. He handled the
subject
with tact, skill and humor, tracing the ment of vegetables and some delicious history of the drama from the time when sauce a sweet and a dessert of fruit and Thespis acted in a cart to the stage of [cheese form the main points of this to-day. lie illustrated his speech with principal meal. Poor families will have a number of anecdotes, and kept
the
HurnofI,»p*in1vaM was taken off. This young lawyer was very popular
Lincoln!~-.Joseph Jefferson, in Century.
CHARMING FORTITUDE.
Anvc»inB
sc«..^ itrh.KinK to i.ijcht a Big
V°' ,»
4
myself, in front of a store where, in addition to hardware, a supply of ammunition was kept for the use of a regiment then1. Suddenly we heard a terrible explosion, and being either thrown or having unconsciously ran, I know not which, we, at any rate, found ourselves alout twenty yards from where the explosion occurred, and could see part of the roof in the street.
trickling from her forehead where the v. a plainer sort of gondola, without its Rviiur debris made a deep cash, ltoth ..
1
by I«oed Houghton to tlie members of open. He pulls out a heap of books,
years ago, when Carlyle first came "Letter from a soldier in Abyssinia to on a visit to t^ord Houghton's grand- his brother in Italy." In an instant the father at l-VHton. hi* host took occasion soldiers are crowding round him, listen-
of a flne hv the Prwt
*',1 factory chimney.
of an weldottt sinot rc to women poete. ung tlb la the (Meirticwe thai I ktw
mankind, tlwit we soon feeK wiven doubi. expected that his gimml would they scan eagerly for something to fit s'king to them, that he readily concur hut the philosopher was their own particular case as they are *.--f»«*h» ani drawl, or alt a not in concurring mood, and hi* reply hurried away ap the narrow Ian®.--tdngnhir artwulation. lest offense betake I was: "I d« not at alt agree with yon. Chambers' Journal. wlwrv none was ii.t mled. Hence, men Since I have been und'u your hospitable) Am* Meant 7h»*0*her Kind
th*t
"vrk
ls feelat mrrivd
a^xtcd 1 Xnve^S^tL^ 1 °^°^8 W
and I thai tamnot oompiim the manner of' conversational Hts ^Whatdo yon want with It?" asked Ht to an "ing I- Mer than that fa discouraginir Ixndo», Mr. Dolley, much amused, as be handed S «tTr«r nLu* h*tw~ig a baby teuutily,. "•"J her the coin. gilt.-- rly, I ,* *0, I don't want it I only wanted to 'twI littt
pen tt oartying me away, Tr«i)ir«ii I nee if you had any cents, bectoas sister wish say, w*~ dear frier tbat 1, 5Siy| a We«ern exchange: **A pracU-j Amy said this afternoon that yon hadn't,*' uncomKMrta wben-^aj n»vivaliat in thia neighborbocxi re-l Ve»o«ine"a New*.
1
th«r
llwir pw-'nif I am
10
just
c^ral.
myvtb** »*l* k* those
\ist iwt. ami tie
aelf.
T»«
After taking their
scabs,
debta and one molitary individual aro»,
who
gained
that
breakfast time—but the kind of
sin. Pies, cakes and hot biscuits, fried meat and doughnuts, pickles and preserves, bleach instead of reddening the blood and except in some few districts, we area nation of anemics. If the un-
aild
a roof. I do not think my father, or time devoted to the routine of labor, as
heavy blow fell upon them. A religious decay and ruined digestion revenges itrevival *.as in progress at the time, and
swallows grudgingly snatched from
poses
in blanched cheeks, thinned hair
general prostration. If this is too
higher civilization of our cities, it
noon or at one o'clock. Six hours later
rations of meat, with a slight accompani-
I less richer people will offer greater va-
daily routine of a Parisian household.—
Paris Cor, Boston Journal.
ON THE GRAND CANAL.
Early Morning: Scenes hi Venice—MarketMen on the Way to the Klalto.
The first sign of life on the Grand Canal in the early morning is tho passing by of long barges laden with green vegetables and fruit from the low, flat island of Mazzorbo, and destined for the market at the Rialto. One such has passed as we write its sail is of a rich Indian red with a dark blue tip, a fillet XI1U1UII 1 v'U. »V 1 vli (I IV Wl Vlvj O
11
llvw
WQrk border 1,unninf? round it) and
It was in the year IS80, in a third-rate city called Neufchateau, in the Department des Vosges. France, about noon, ,, white, and has a picture of the Madonna I that we were passing, my father and ,_i__ n„
in
its center a design in orange of St.
George and the dragon. The big rudder is gaudily painted in green and
on the part that is above tho water. The men who are poling the barge along add to the variety of color by one of them I wearing a pink shirt and purple trousers.
The whole thing, together with its green load, looks, as the first rays of the sun glint upon it, like a bit of a broken rainbow that has dropped into the canal and is drifting along on the eddies. Now comes a barg'* heaped up with coal, now one with bales of cotton
for the factory lately established
iamenl him the de- ing *rHh interest, many producing the
%uare white
»ch end of tho boat, and the red b|
thlt floate
„ier it tells us that It is dyn-
nf
ir* ,. a*
_mali
4
,|4*fe„
v-.. hardlv mora
lnd wilh
ioc few coins with which they can become Mr. Mil ties,,
their
mled wlth lhing8 Ior
m0 1
f.™'
bare a approaches the stone, landing
rr
place beside our palace. This barca is
happens to come up. seizes toe op-
portunity, and in a moment his bag is
possessors of the Utile manual, which
fl
I "Mr. Dolley, gi*e me a cent," said
S.'^
I-arfy Fwwler, of loHMkm, a practi-
a call was!philanthrofdiist.
who didn't pay their.aend*
to
wank
he wm
aa editor, emi by the
11,1889.
LEGEND.
REMARKABLE
How Four Celestial Architects Planned The Iotley Crowd to Re Seen the Cathedral of Cologne. 1 Streets of Japan's Capital.
Several years before the foundation- The scenes upon the streets aro
stone of the iamous chapel was laid, mixed as the signs. American street there lived a man who was far in ad*!
weeks passed. On one occasion, when Albertus had been sitting by the side of his flickering lamp, deeply impx*essed in tho construction of a design, after offering a fervent prayer for help, ho became overpowered with sleep. It may have been midnight when he awoke. His cell was filled with a Heavenly radiance, and the door leading to the hall of the monastery was standing open. Albertus rose in terror from his seat it seemed as if a flash of lightning had passed before his eyes, and he became aware of four men dressed in white cassocks entering his cell, with crowns of burnished gold, glistening like fire, on their heads. The first was a grave old man, with a long, flowing white beard covering his breast, in his hand he held a pair of compasses the second, somewhat younger in appearance, carried a masons square the third, a powerful man, whose chin was covered with a dark, curly beard, held a rule, and the fourth, a handsome youth with auburn locks, brought a level. 1 hey walked in with grave and solemn tread, and behind them, in her celestial beauty, came Our Lady, carrying in her righ hand a lily stalk with brightlygleaming flowers. She made a sign to her companions, whereupon thoy proceeded to sketch, with practical hands, a design in lines of fire upon the bars walls of the cell. The pillars rose on high, the arches curved to meet them, and two majestic towers soared into tho vault of heaven. Albertus stood lost in contemplation aiul admiration of the glorious picture thus presented to his gaze.
As suddenly as it bad appeared, neaveniy vision again vanished, Albertus found himself alone but tho plan of the splendid edifice, which had been drawn by the four celestial architects, under the direction of the Virgin Mother, was traced upon his memory in inefTacablo lines, Very soon after this he presented a plan of the Cathedral of Cologne to Archbishop Conrad. The most high-flown aspirations of the prelate had been surpassed beyond meashurer The foundations of tho building were soon afterward laid, and future generations carried on the erection, and completed, as we now see it. a wonder of the wliolo world,—N. Y. Catholic News.
The performer picks out an envelope, and, after feeling of it, with much ceremony pronounces the sentence agreed upon, and the confederate in the audience acknowledges that he wrote it. To confirm this the performer tears open the envelope and repeats the sentence as though he found it on the inclosed paper, which is in reality another man's sentence, which he reads, and then, picking up another envelope and fumbling it over, he calls out the senten ce he has just read. The one who wrote it says it is right, the performer tears open
the envelope, reads what is in it, and »i proceeds in that way through the lot— N. Y. Star*
A Big Kentucky Snake.
afcw
a
Badhi week whf
the factory girls of Loodba
*m-
of 2,000 bnncbea of ftoweni gath-
awrButa
on her
«rta«.
cars,
vance of all his contemporaries in the trot by your jinrikisha pulled by a barecultivation of human knowledge. This legged cooly, and foreign carriages, with was Albertus Magnus, of the Order of coachman and footman in livery, dash by St. Dominic. At this period Conrad von rude ox-carts, the beasts of which, with Hochstaden occupied the archi-episcopal great straw mats stretched above them throne at Cologne, and had for some move lazily along, led by a bowl-hatted time been engrossed with the thought of farmer dressed in a blue Japanese gown erecting a vast and majestic cathedral, and wearing upon his feet sandals of tho With this object in view he caused the I same straw with which his ox is shod, friar to be summoned before him, and Here a gang of half-naked men push directed him to design a plan for the great carts of merchandise through tho erection of a building which should streets of the great city, and their eclipse in splendor all then existing chorus of grunts at each turn of tho structures. wheels is broken in upon by the whistle
Albertus cogitated day and night in of the railroad locomotive at tho stahis lonely cell over the grand idea tion. On the sidewalks the mixtwhieh had been intrusted to him: he ure grows worse than ever. The colors prayed fervently and continuous that of the clothes are as many as thoso of God would assist him. But, notwith- the coat of.Joseph, and the blue-gowned standing all his meditation and prayer, man of old Japan, with his head shaved a mist seemed to enshroud his irnag- at the top, and with the br»ek hair done ination: no picture that he could re- up in a short door-knocker cue, walks duce to skape would present it-: side by side with his almond-ejed self. His heart was bowed down brother in modern clothes. The old with anxiety as in the silent mans white-mittcned
watches of the night he sat immersed on sandals, while those of liis^ brother in thought and reflection and yet tho I creak in patent leathers. The European shadowy outline^ of a superb temple I outfit, however, of tho younger brother floated before his' mind and seemed to is often one of rare combinations. 1 fill his thoughts. When he was tired have seen Japanese on the streets of out with the strain or mental exertion,
1
the and
AN INGENIOUS TRICK.
How Uctulinjc Written Matter Through an Kiivelopo
In
Done.
One of the puzzling tricks performed by so-called public mind-readers, or clairvoyants, is an extremely simple deception. The performer standing on the stage asks several persons in the audience to write each a sentence on a slip of paper and seal it in an envelope. Of course the stationery is furnished and afterward collected. One of tho audience is a confederate and writes a sentence agreed upon beforehand. When the assistant goes through tho houso gathering up the envelopes the confederate's contribution is carefully put where it will be the last one of the lot to be taken up.
ran rapidly away.*
It haa a bright Spotted akin and ahead
rtwwwa.
'Tin
verj vrtmi for 8tw to car When wjtww* Ah4 with a milt'care
TTm '4 *1^ It if they 'd ir? Yet. after all, th-w'w «re»u icnmg* Than men wtklfy rant. And thry re tbi mmma don*
4 dnttor« cam rme* t*t peaptedav*a*
wn
«fthe Defy
Xna
TOKIO.
as
drawn by scraggy Japanese horses,
feet
Tokio clad in a
he would cast himself upon his knees starched shirt and a pair of European and implore the Blessed Virgin to as- shoes sist him in his task which he was unable to accomplish alone In this way
clatter along
simple,
white, ^ell-
Others have passed me dressed
in frock coats, with celluloid collars fastened around their bare and shirtless necks, and with thin gauze drawers taking tho place of pantaloons. I saw once an old Japanese mother with blackened teeth and shaved eyebrows walking on the Ginza in company with her daughter, who sported a genuine French bustle and whose bunchy form looked awkward and dumpy in a foreign corset. Tho Japanese women, however, take less to tho foreign dress than do tho num. They lose their picturesqueness by tho change, and the sentiment in Japan is, I think, generally in favor of tho women retaining tho soft, graceful, long-flow-ing gowns of their mothers. Many of the men, however, are well dressed, and the highest officials of the government compare favorably in appearance and clothes with thoso of our capital at Washington. The motley above spoken of is chiefly that of the common people who ape their superiors, and to whom tho foreign dress is altogether new.-— Cosmopolitan.
POOR BUT HONEST.
He
Tried Har«l «o Keep His Prumlae, and Nobody Kicked. The other forenoon a young man with a forlorn-looking countenance, and a suit of clothes which scented to have run all together and consolidated to save expense, mounted a salt barrel 011 tho sidewalk on Michigan avenue, and started off with: "My dear friends, pause for a moment and hear my narrative. I am a poor but honest young man. My motto is 'Excelsior.' My parents aro dead and I am a poor lone orphan."
for
WANTED.
"lirANTKIt—A lirijrfH younjf 1K
E. OREKNT,
I4
Kentuckians frequently see snak**, hut they do not often encounter uuch a monster as was reported to have been seen by several reliable parties in the ni/iT-r
ricinity of Center Furnace, on the Cum berland river. James Armstrong, a prominent farmer of Lyon County» whiles out bunting, came across the reptile, which be aaya ia at leant twenty-five feet in length. Its bod* was partially concealed by the undergrowth, and he had seized a club and wondering how he could attack it, when a hissing noise caused him to look up and he beheld the monster's head reared up about five feet above the earth aa it gaaed at bim, lta forked tongue hanging oat He aays It would have fought him bad he not re-1 tired, when it
c*,.3r'
Vt your* of ant* to lenrn a bti^lncw. 4'Sl bn*h Avenue.
"1*taXTED—Aj?enW
for Prudential^ Life tn-
Vt niirarico ConinRiiv. ApntyUF. 8. HOK FLICH, Superintendent, WSii Wabiwh Avenue Room 4. "II A NTKD—It vnu want to wive your money
W tul. /shnrt'ti Jn the Indiana Hnvlwr*. Kj«m and innl'WriR Association. Hhare* *an be taken at any time. No buck dw* You can dei«wit frorafl 100 per month. Offlw ftVi h]mM avenue. U.K. It A VKNH. 8*'y. "1
it
A NTF.D- -Second -hundffned*. clothing, etc. YY bought and %M. Barirainis always oti hand. J.
32fi and 8» Ohio xtrcrt.
FOU&AIJS.
I4
^OR RAbE. TRADE OH KKST.—SW liotl«» South pan. will *eil low forea*b, or would trad* for modem -t. lt •"••&> or two fn d- -Sra ble locality. If ncitb. »o• 1 nor traded will r« nt. Alwi *lx imnHfu! r••!,is, No. 302 North Fifth *trect. Enquire on pr mine*.
Have vacant lot* and Improved one* for wue
^O'ftSAbE—Dr. Flrnberif'ii iniainuie
8ALK—Oid papers at 30c per hundred, ruitable for houxicariinjc purpose*. Inquire at Daily New* office-
FOR KF.NT !**«»t Api'-'r
or mr
North K.i
MOXKV TO IvOA N.
Mosey
TO
LOAN—Any
mm ««r
RIDDLE, HAMILTON A Co.
LO*T. "tmdnf t*S reward for re
OIHIH *YItO\
EXTRAORDINARY
cm
Titn***.
truly be «dd of Dr. new
(Vtffltb
HtTUp MM
the size of a child Louisville Time*. of eeagl.^ cold# and Inn*, IfmiplfartlMl.*. I BXTRAORD1NARY that br diittt
*ad m* a waah HwiU
Isw with wat^r leatrklr rone the won»t fomn or catarrh BXTHAOKDINAKVlto!every bottle f» poattlv^ly fuaranued.
EXTRAORDINAftY aa aotd only thronah thr retail irrffr. Tr dM, tryular 'Oc
DAILY XEWS.
KKAl)
S 7^E D/»ICYflEU5
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Furnishes more general read
ing matter to its subscribers
ami patrons than any other
city paper.
Its local columns
rior to all others
Ho added considerable to the ..above, sua iu a it'wmiuutt'N lie liud a crowd of fifty people around him. Then ho an- I public ill I eri'C. llatlte, 11011 need: "My dear friends, 1 do not ask forx charity. All 1 want is a fair show to make my way in life. I shall now ask you to chip in a nickel apiece, and I will endeavor to do something never yetdoue on the face of tho globe. I will try to turn a quadruple somersault in tho air."
Tho crowd seemed to like tho idea, and the small change rattled in until tho gross amount was about three dollars. Tho young man got down off the barrel, spit on his hands, picked out his ground, and turned a pretty fair somersault, llo turned another and another and then remounted the barrel and said: "Kind friends, I have tried to, but 1 can't do it. Assuring you of my hcartfolt thanks
your kindness, I remain
yOurs truly." And not a man uttered a word of complaint.—Detroit Free Press.
Youny: man, do not be deceived. Your best girl doesn't care half
fo
much about
von getting a mustache raised as she does about you getting your salary raised.— Burlington Free Press.
ONLY
TEN CENTS
PER WSEK.
Notwithstanding
larged size of the
forchronic m-umatTimi. disease* of the' subscription price remains the idt»«y» and scrofui*, at tic©. Kochler'* grocery,: eu 468th Fourth street.
same.
Why pay
terms,
paper vvlien
1
U» tlit '. *lUl Wlllrb ft
mmpt« tree.
At a 'mitr*, Mtootic'-•-•i hy DR. J. O, OA8TO, JtO Mala 8tM*t. Terns Uaota. fe
gsssss®
are supe
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all the' news, from a
impartial standpoint,
a readable style.
in
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written
Its telegraph report is just
the thing lor an afternoon pa
per. It gives all the foreign
and domestic news in briel but
comprehensive lorm.
It leads
in many features,
surpassing in
every way any
thing ©ver before given to the
The News has established
its independence—it has been
manifested in every instance.
The is re, News
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the people.
15c or 20c for a
the News is de-
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per week
i.
iabl e. It
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fn
en-
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.1
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'.'S scribe for the News.
I'..
door for toe
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HI
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