Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1895 — Page 11
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, SATUBDAYj DECEMBEB 2a 1895.
r A KENTUCKY MIRACLE. : , o JUDGE JOHN M. RICE TELLS HOW HE WAS CURED OF SCIATICA. l*f drcnlt Jndft CmkgnmmmM mm* AMembljrmait. (JfVom ttu Covington, JCy., Post.) The Hon. John M. Rice, of Loniw, recce County. Kentucky, hue for the paat two year* retired from actire life aa Criminal and Circuit Jodps of the ■ixteenth Judicial Diatrict of Kentucky. He has for many years .erred hi. satire eounty and state in the legieiatureatPrankfort and at Washington, and, until his retirement was a noted figure in political and Judicial circles. The Judge is well-known throughout the state and possemes the best qualities which eo to make a Kentucky gentlemen honored wherever he is known. A few days ago a Kentucky Pott reporter gelled upon J udge Rice, who in the followKg words related the history of the causes that led to his retirement. “ It is just about six years since I had an attack of rheumatism; slightatfirst,butsoondgreloping into Sciatic rheumatism, which began first with acute shooting pains in the hips, gradually extending downward to my feet. “ Hy condition became so bad that I eventually lost all power of mv legs, and then the liver, kidneys and bladder and in fact, mv whole svstera, became deranged. '"In 1M6, attended by my son John, I went to Hot Spri ims, Ark., but was not much benefited by some months st«v there. My liver was actually dead,and a dull persistent pain in its region kept me on the rack all the timflL In 1890 I was reappointed Circuit Judge, but it waa impossible for me to give attentwm to my duties. In 1891 I went to the Silurian Springs, Wankesbaw, Wis. I stayed there tome time, but without improvement. 1 "The muscle* of my limb* were now refaced by atrophy to mere strings. Sciatic pains tortured me-terribly, but it was ths disordered condition of my liver that was I felt gradually wearing my life away. Doctors gave ms up oompletely. “ I lingered on in this condition sustained almost entirely by stimulants until ApriL 1893. One day John saw an account of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People ip the Kentucky Ptol. This was something
inure Miau lurcc ut ivtai umyo U.v vssw biusv* The effect of the pills, however, was marvelous and I could soon eat heartily, a thing I had not don# for years. The liver began almost instantaneously to perform its functions, and has done so ever since. Without doubt tbs pills saved my life apd while I do not crave notoriety I cannot refuse to testify to their worth. . Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People eontain all the elementa necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They may be had of all druggists, or direct from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. T., for 60c. per box, or six boxes for $2AO.
THE FLIGHT OF PCNY BAKER
A .NEW STORY OP BOY LIFE.
By Wllllasn Dean Howells. Copyrighted, 1886. by William Dean Howells. IN SIX PARTS—PART FOUR.
CHAPTER VII.
NEW GRIEVANCES. After that. Pony Baker gave up running off to the Indians. He about gave up running off altogether. He had a splendid Fourth of July. HI. mother could not let him stay up the whole of the night before, but she let him get up at 4 o'clock, and fire off both his packs of shooting-crackers; and though she had forbidden him to go down to the river bank where the men were firing off the cannon, he hardly missed It. He- felt
For he hwd made up hla mind to run off with the '-I'v-ue which waa coming the
next Tuesday.
tuii.YN. his face away, sobbing, and bis father- after standing by his bed a nrement, went away without saying anything but, ‘'Don’t forget your prayers, I'ory. You’ll feel differently in the morn-
ing, I hope.”
Pony fell asleep thinking how he would come back to the Boy’s Town with the circus when he was grown up, and when he came out riding three horses bareback, he should see his father and mother and sisters in one of the lower seats. They would net know him, but ho would know
for him. "He wants to go with the cir-
cus.”
They both set down their buckets, and Pony felt himself turning pale, when the circus man came toward him. “Wants to go with the circus, heigh? Let’s have a look at yovj/* He took Pony by the shoulders and turned him slowly round, and looked at his nice clothes, and took him by the chin. "Orphan?" he asked. Pony did not know- what to say, but Jim l^onard nodded; perhaps he did not know what to say either; but Pony felt as if they had both told a lie. “Parents living?” The circus man looked at Pony, and Pony had to say *hat
they were.
He gasped out “Yes,” so that you could
them, and he would send for them to ! ^arcely hear him, and the circus man
come to the dressing-room, and would be very good to them, all but his mother; ! bo would be very cold and stiff with her, \ though he tvould know that she was prouder of him than all the rest put ! together, and she would go away almost I
ciying.
; He began being cold and stiff to her the I very next morning, although she was bet- !
said. “Well, that’s right. When we take an orphan, we want to have his parents living, so that we can go and ask them
what sjort of a boy he is.”
He idoked at Pony In such a friendly, smiling way that Pony took courage to ask him whether they would want him to
drink burnt brandy.
“What for?"
“To keep me little. 1
sleepy as soon as his crackers were done, ter than eye* to *'*{- | "Oh."!'See.” The circus man took off
there, and slept till breakfast time. After shl came tqjk’.m aj\I said: ’“What maicea j
ying to do things rccly speak to hi
there, and slept till breakfast time. Alter sh* came to him and said: “What mak*s breakfast he went up to the court-house you act so fcttangely. Pony? Are you of-
‘"“j ; ""rti haughtily. an4
i he twitched away from where she
' sitting on ■
isea io waren out tor t-uuy, »uyt aaiart ; over him go ont to the Second Lock with them, and ! 1
yard with some other fellows, and then after dinner,/ when they all came round and beggod, and the big fellows prom ised to watch out for Pony, she let him
the side of his bed.
was
leaning
out to the Second I^ock before. It outside of the corporation line, and was a great thing in itself.
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‘WANTS TO GO WITH THE CIRCUS. HEIGHr SAID THE CIRCUS MAN. After supper Pony’s mother let him fir* off his powder snake, and she even came out and; looked at It, with her fingers in her ears. He assured her that It wouldn't make any noise, but she could not believe him; and when the flash came, she gave a little whoop, and ran in door». It shamed him before the beys, for fekr they would laugn; and she acted even wor*e when his father wished to let him go up to the court-house yard, to see the fireworks. A lot of the fellows were going, and he was to go with the crowd, but his father was to come a little behind, so as to see that nothing happened to him; and when they were just starting off - what should she do but hollar to his father from the door where she was standing, "Do be careful of the child, Henry!" It not seem as if she could be a good mother When she tried, and she was about the fraidest mother in the Roy's Town. All the way up to the court-house the boys kept snickering and whispering, “Don’t stump your toe, child," and “Be careful of the child, boys,” and things like that till Pony had to fight some of them. Then they stopped. They were afraid his father would hear anyway. But the fireworks were splendid, and the fellows werrf very good to Pony, because hla father stood in the middle of the crowd and treated them to lemonade; and they did not plague him any more going home. It was 10 o’clock when Pony got hgme; it was the latest he had ever been
‘On account of last night. Pony?” she
said wlUi
felt his
ing sorter, and he had to set his teeth hard, hard, or he would have broken
down crying.
•Tf it's for that, you mustn't, Pony, dear. You don’t know how you frightened me. When your snow-ball hit me. I felt sure it was a, bat, and I’m so afraid of bats, you know. I didn’t mean to hurt my poor boy's feelings so, and you mustn't
mind it any more, Pony,”
She stooped down and kissed him. on the forehead, but he did not move or say anything; only, after that he felt more forgiving toward his mother. He made up his raiffJ to be good to her along with the rest when he came back from the circus. But still he meant to run off with the circus. He did not see how he could do anything else, for he had told all the boys that day that he was going to do it,
ay tnat be was going to ao it,
and when they Just laughed and said: “Oh, yea! Think you cap fool your grandmother! It’ll be like running off with the
* * 13 vy y - rwnr Vila • Vi ys r» 1 1 rt W Jl . : J
Indians,’’ Pony wa (
iggt-d his heal, and said nether it would or not,
they would see wl .MM . . El and offered to bet them what they dared.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE CIRCUS COMES TO THE BOY’S
. TOWN.
The morning of the circus day «11 the fellows went out to the corporation line to meet the circus procession. There were ladles and knights, the first thing, riding on spotted horses; and then a band chariot, all made up of swans and dragons. There were about twenty baggage wagons; but before you go to them there was the greatest thing of all. It was a chariot drawn by twelve Shetland ponies, and it was shaped like a greit shell, and around in the bottom of the shell there were little circus actors, boys and girls, dressed In their circus clothes, and they all looked exactly like fairies. They scarcely seemed to see the fellows as they ran alongside of their chariot, - but Hen Blllard and Archy Hawkins, who were always cutting up, got close enough to throw some peanuts to the circus boys, and some of the little circus girls laughed, and the driver looked around and cracke’d hla whip at the fellows; and they all had to get out of the way, then. Jim Leonard said that the circus boys and girls were all stolen, ‘and nobody was allowed to come close to them for fear that they should try to send word to their friends. Some Of the fellows did not believe it; and wanted to know bow he knew it; and he said he read it in a paper; after that nobody could deny it. But he said that if you went with the circus men of your own free will they would treat you firstrate; only they would give you burnt brandy to % keejl you little; nothing else but burnt brandy would do that, but It would do it, sure. PoOy was scared at first when he heard that most of the ..circus, fellows were stolen, but he thought If Tie went of his own accord ho would be All right. Still, he did not feel so much like running oft with the circus as he did before the circus came. He asked Jim Leonard whether the otreus fftifTfifaffe all the circus children drink burnt brandy; and Archy Hawkins and Hen BUlard heard him ask. and began to tpock him. They took him up betwen them, ope by his arms and the other by the legs, and ran along with him, and kept saying, “Does It want to be a great big circus actor? Then it shall, so It shall,” and “We’U tell the circus men to be very careful of you, Pony dear!” till Pooy wrigghd himself loose and began to stone them. After that they had to let him alone, for when a fellow began to stone you
hat and rubbed Ms forehead with a silk handkerchief, which he threw thp top of his hat, before he put! U ?am. “No, I don’t know Us we will. We’re rather short for giants Just now. ow yfould you like to drink a glass of
morning and grow
elephant’s nllk every into an eight-fooler?”
Pony said he didn’t know whether he wculdlike to be quite so big; and then the emeus man said perhaps he would rather go for an India rubber man; that was what they called the contortionist [in those days. ‘Tart’s feel of you again.” The circus man took hold of Pony and felt his Joints. “You’re put together pretty right; but I reckon we could mako you do If you’d let us take you apart with a screw driver- and ilmber- the parts ip with rattlesnake oil. Wouldn’t like it, heigh? Well, let me see!” The circus man thought a moment, and then he sa d. “How w'ould double-somersaults on four
horses bare-back do?”
Pony said that would do, and then t le circus man said, “Well, then, we’ve Just hit it. because our double-somersau t, four-horse bare-back is just going lb lea re us, and we want a new one rigln away. Now, there’s more than one way of Joi it Ing a circus, but the bpst way is to wait on your front steps with ycrur things 111 packed up, and the procession comes alor g at about 1 o’clock in the morning ar a picks you up. Which’d you rather do?” Pony pushed his toe Into the turf, as l>o always did when he was embarrassed, b^i he made out to say he would rather wa
out on the front steps.
“Well, v then, that’s all settled,” the circus man. “We’H be along,” he was going away with his dog, but Leonard called after him, “You ha’i asked him wher^bouts he lives.” ' The circus mair kept on, and he without! looking round, “Oh, that’s right. We’ve got somebody that lool
after that.”
“It’s the magician,” said Jim Leonard to Pony, and they walked away. TO BE CONTINUED. COLD THROUGH IGNORANCE.
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PONY TOUCHED OFF HIS POWDER-SNAKE.
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Just bsfore the circus came, about the end of July, something happened that made Pony mean to run off more than anything that ever was. His father and mother were coming home from a walk. In the evening: it was so hot nobody Could stay in the house: and just as they were coming to the front steps, Pony stole up behind them and tossed a snowball which he had go* out of the garden at his mother. Just for fun. The flower struck her very softly on her hair, for she had no bonnet on, and she gave a jump : and a halloo that made Pony laugh; and ' then she caught him by the arm and (boxed bis ears. “Oh. my goodness! It was
you, was thought It
MifcKfaV,„_JMMEEi and wquld not mind his father, who was calling after her, “Lucy, Lucy, my dear
child.”
Pony was crying, too. for he did not ntend To frighten hte mother, and when he todk his fun as if he Jiad done something k icked, he did ^ not know what to think. He stole off io bed. find her Jay there drying in the dark, anj expecting that she would come to him, as she always (fid, to hav* him say that he svas sorry When he had been wicked, or ttlteil him that she spas sorry, when She thought she had not been quite fair with him. But she did not come, and After a good while his flaiher came., and said, “Arc you swaka. Pony? I’m sorry your mother misunderstood your tun. But you mus’nt mksd it. dear boy. She’s not well, and
she’s very nervous.”
S ’T don’t care l” Pony sobbed out “She won’t have a finance to touch me again!”
in the Boy’s Town, you had to let him alone, unless you were going to whip him, and the fellows had only wanted to have a little fun with Pony. But what they did made him all the more resolved to run away with the circus. Just to show them. He hel<>ed to carry water for the circus men’s horses when they got the chance to tent up. along with the boys who earned their admission that way. He had no need to do It, because his father was going to take him In, anyway; but Jim Leonard said It was the only way to get acquainted with the circus men. Still he was afraid to speak to them, and he would not have said a word to any of them. If it had not been that one of them spoke to him first when he saw him come lugging a great pail full of water, and bending far over on the other side to. balance It. ‘That’s right,” the circus man said to Pony. “If you ever fell into that bucket, you’d drown, sure.” was a big fellow, with funny eyes, he had a whitd bull dog at his heels; the fellows said he was the one guarded the outside of the tent the circus began, and kept the boys looking in under the curtains. then. Pony could not have had courage to say anything, but Jim ard was Just behind him with another bucket of water, and he spoke up
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A Tropical Minister Who Did Not Know How To Turn On the Heat.
Washington Post.
A member of the Houae, who has served bn the foreign affairs committee, and who has often came in contact, and still comes In contact, socially, with many of the diplomates, remarked yesterday: “I have jusrt had a remarkable proof of the fact that our South American neighbors lack a, good deal of what we call horse sense ?ln Anglo-Saxon. It was furnished by bne of the ministers of the South American republics now (n Washington. He i» intelligent and hard-headed enough, generally speaking, but he fell down completely In regard to a very simple matter—a heating register. - “He occupies a fine residence in a fashioinabie part of the city. The cold snap came on, and the minister began to shiver and freeze in his own house. He endured it in patience two weeks. The other day he sent for -the landlady. ? “ ‘Ah, madame,’ he began, in his characteristic accent, and with despair in every line of his face; 'ah, Madame, I can not stand de house,’ it ees simply ’orreeble—deeo cold! Ah, I am wretched— my wife she is wretched, de ’ole ’ouse’old ees freezing tfr dead. I haf sect up in dat 1 corner, a Turkish '* roog around my shoulders, a blanket around my shoulders —so—and yet I can not keep warm. It is
’orreeble colt.’
” ’Why, that is strange,’ said the landlady; ‘last summer I had the furnace completely overha.Med. and I have never had the least complaint about the house
being 'n. ufficiently healed.’
” T no '*an help dat,’ said the minister, ‘vat 1 tell you ees de truth. I freeze to' dead in your ‘oiise ever since do colt weather com me: tee. Eet fs ‘orreeble.’ “The landlady looked aroutjd the room. “ ‘There are two registers here. Do you
know'how to work them?’
“ ‘Wccrk dero?’ exclaimed the minister; ”ow? No, I nevftir touch deni, nevair.* r 'Don’t you turn the little bi'iss knob when t you want heat, and push It the
“ v *■“ —- - > warm?”
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minister, in a of helpless sur-
Wtaat
I
other way wheh it gets
asked the landla Jy,
“ ‘No,’ exclaimed the high, long-drawi note
prise, looking ejxeeeding puzzled. ‘Wb I know ’bout dut? All I know is dat
die of de ’orreetle colt.’
“‘Well,’ said ahe, ‘perhaps that explains it. You see this little brass thing
in the register?’
“ T see dat leetje brass t’ing in de reg-
eester, yes. VeJ] ?’
“ ’Well, all yo 4 need to do is to push
It this way. See bow it’s done?’
“A hot wave Df air suddenly shot up into the diploma] e’s face, as he bent over the register to siudy the mechanism. He almost screamed with joy as he saw the simple process of converting his ice chamber into a tragical hothouse, and the landlady had a narrow escape from being
hugged to death,
‘‘And for two weeks*’ continued the Congressman, “tne minister had swathed himself in Turk sh rugs and California blankets iff a desperate attempt to keep from freezing to death'.-.It had never occurred to him or his Irish butler, or the rest of his household, to puah the button
in the register.”
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' a
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Our lease expires in about sixty days. We will sell everything in the store at 10 per cent, off of regular price, and many articles at 20 and 30 per cent, discount. We do not want to move the goods; there
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