Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1897 — Page 7
: J 'V ^
XflE INDIANAPOLIS NDWF.
fe :
THE NEW YEAR BRINGS THESE PRETTY SETTINGS FOR FEMININE GEMS Chtcsr* TSvm-X«.~cK
X«w Torfc Sift.,
There used to be i effect that the hand that ruled the world. There 5 true, one pvnon wtth icntlroen:. i« etlll popular that ret>ponds to the u»»t:
ni*** 'Km***
well, he sounds well, too. , who talks about roekhur cradles. But while ho soars science kMiffhs In her the world moves on, but the It t»a‘t the proper tbind to*- cradies to be rocked nowadays: at least, not When ass baWee In them The days of baby" are gone-or supposed to shudders at such as: “ **• it s'sll trim to Its own an* be rocked, so It s'alir Ac* to up-to-date Ideas baby talk (•com« one of the dead languages, may have lain about us older our Infancy, but the present gents being born ifcto the realm of ! It is a serious and a solemn salubrious thins to be a baby
now. ■•: v >r;V V
|p the matter of rocking, for example, wfeers Is the fln de slecle mother wim doesn’t know better than to r<><-k her Infam treasurer This to considered to to
almost as fearful a relic of barbarism I / as are trottln*. toeelna. cuddling and Koveltu« in neckwear ar^dear to »\ ery other heathenish practice*. Every stu- wom.iu *. heart, for on the dteeeiu* of tl-s •lent of child culture Hold* thrsc doinir thmat and bust the beauty of m>r. In proper abhorrence Babies, by the women depends. Genuine artists are e»way. no longer ”Ju»t grow"; they are m Perl* to design theart .n«Kle.=. rulttvsted If trying to bend the tw* there Is no woman so plain tnat she properly trill make a human race to oft ,
der, then the millennium mum com* *° 0n ' Waaffot that Hr Lived. The exponents of modern ( hiid culture c*n make any man wonder that h- lived ihrough his Infancy; lived to love and bless the mother who rocked him in her Jirms, and dosed him with old wives’
may not make h-ers*if attractive by a and closed by a bow of white or colored Judicious selection. 1 satin No. a—An exquisite high collar Tho iiluMratiot a toginnlng at the left and *rravat of the now mandarin yellow hand, fhow No. 1—A collarette core- velvet, edged by a narrow band o. chin<«f narrow ruhBes of white nils mu«- chilla. 'Pho collarette is separated ip
this collarette portion starts
at tba sloes, r.nd forms two ears, the large bow Is finished by a jabot of lace. No. 3 ia comiHised of a ruche of white silk muslin confined by a travai of green taffeta, with luce-finished ends. No. 4 is
lin mounted vpon a collar of white satin the back, and ft a res outward, as shown. ; a plastrin of green taffeta simulating a
vest, cut out in battlements upon a gathered center of mousseitne de sole- This battlemcnted veet moy bo cut only a few inches wide or extend to the armholes. No. quo is velvet white silk
' satin tibbon is confined across . ■ . ^ ^ by straps of turquoix velvet, terminating In loop* tsuHtfitv by small gold outtona No. 'i and Inst, is a evlkr rnd mvat ol rose “■atin striped with white silk braid. The cravat has two square rovers. IS absolutely a novel creation.
1st) a child So they say. You must "divert th* ehlld'p attention." Tt sounds simple, and some mothers seem to find*’; It so. When the baby howls ittf the inkstand, which row do not want him to have, you Just divert hi* attention to yesterday’s newspaper, which you are
UHTOLD HIDDEN RICHES.^!WOOD PAPER IMPROVED.'3
tcmadles and klesed him and tickled him j quite willing he should have. That Is
and cuddled him. and also shook him the way It works
end "spatted the naughty bands,” and rnfortunately it to nof *o simple as it
HfeSsSSS Hr
do any of those things They are ail un- Impropriety of giving him the newepahaalthful. either mentally or morally or Per. He wiH chew It m soon an he can physically 1 H to his mouth, and every up-to-dat<‘ A# might perhaps to expected, the kn —’ 1 th " oHnt.r. ink *. «n f
FBI tTLKSS !IK%R< HKS FOR LOST
Ml*f28 IS THU WBST.
A Glimpse of Twin Lakes—The Rick Placers Guarded by Father De Smet’s Inhibition— K Mystery
of the I pper Missouri.
reeds of the n*jt doctrine have flourished mors mightily with some of the fathers than with the mothers. Not always, of course- But, for Instance, there is a cer, isin young physician in this city who Is putting his first born through (he latest Infantile paces. Under strict orders from her husband, the young mother refrains front handling the child mbro than is uhseiwtely ncceasary Baby spends moot of his waking hours lying on a big. wld» bed. Although stilt in the ordinary longclothes stage, ho docen t wear these trailing garment* except when ho to taken dowa-stalnr for company drill. Tho rest at th* lime he wear* short dresses and some warm garments of home Invention and vtopufacturc on the lower part of his body and his kicking extremities. Thus ••quipped th4 doctor’s young hopeful rolls and kicks and cow and enjoys life. He must not to hell In a sitting posture, behtuen hto father say 4 that backbones are worth muuh at such an early stage of the gam> of life. Kvun supiwttu haads at tl»« hack of yo*.ng hopeful’u ueok and probabl* wale* am not sulfl- < lent precautions. Put him on his back
• nd 1st him roll-
The kissing of bsbiea has also fallen I two disrepute. In n<> r«epe»* havy manners toward children chsnge<J more eontPlOtcly than In thl« regard. Formerly iwoplo fait that they had to kits every 'why. no matter how uninviting. Met th * fend mother ahouid think them lacking in ap!wecls tlor. Nowadays one asks permtsslon of the particular parents to- • ors snwsing a kies around tohlnd the •*ar of some Irrcslstltge cherub One* U|KM. s time these defeneeleas little • reatures were the prey of absolute Ktr*ns«r». oscillatory people who held up miHtonwid* and kissed the pretty babies. And the nursemaid* regarded It a* «
mother knows that printers' Ink to an undsslrabls addition to a baby’s menu, j Also, she knows that pape~ is manufset- ! - ured out, of-i-somethln*. she Is not quite ■ur« what, but old rags recur to her mind with great persistency. The newspaper will not. therefore, do. so baby’s mind must to diverted a second time.
Of course the nesrest thing to the cherub's rattle. This has been selected on
Kiyp (Mont ) Letter New York Sun There is not a mining community ,n
the West, from the Arctic to Mexico, which has not an vdiden; snd cherished tradition of a lest mine of fabulous richness. Here in this northern Montana
. , ... , - J— —. region or.e hear* of three such mines. : O"" ^ S "» L »* ! c * b "' ™ to '- A But It ought to appeal to any baby of Frenchman cam* into Helena many ordinary intelHgenco that one familiar >tATi agJi bringing with him thousands , rattis to not a good rival for a strange *1 * .. ... . . | and shiny tnksiand. plus a newspaper of dollars worth of gold du»t. He told Which rattles, too. As your baby doe* : his friends that he hail tound some ! have ordinary intelligence, this view of ! „ VBr the esse strikes him at once, and you are f P ,ac * r *r«und richer than any evsr s compelled to hope elsewhere than In rat- worked. The dust he brought down had as-, ^ssS/rSrffisrwSiiS; *» — «•«> j»*-
gets of gold. There was almost a handful of them, ami he hurried back and j gave them to the father. The voyageurs J at once became excited and proposed to j return to the Missouri at once and procure the neeeosary tools to work the ! placer. But after a few minutes of deep [ thought the father arose and said: “My children, this gold has been the | cause of nearly all the crime and misery j the world has seen. Think now of the ; trouble and misery you would cause' should you start to mine it here. In a few months this beautiful, peaceful country would be overrun with wild and deeperafe men. They would destroy the great herds of game we see about us on every hand. They would fight and murder the poor savages who would be sure ‘o resent the Invasion of their country j and the destruction of their food supply, and these are your people, for you are, every one of you. married to women I whose brothers and sisters, and there- j fore, your relatives, too. you would
Oreat Britain and Germany had lesseaed theirs. Germany to still a great deal ahead of us in quantity of exports; that
she is not so In quality and price CMMU-
hope for th*
DO! RTS
ABOUT THE IHRABII.ITY Dig APPEARING,
So Danger \ow of Its t ntlmely Decay—New Machines that Make Sia Feet a Mlnate and Thrlty-Flve Tons Daily .
he experiment!*. When tne money come**
tumbling out In a beautiful Jingle, he for-
gives you for the affair of the Inkstand and the newspaper. He fixes his affec-
tions and hto chubby fingers on a blu silver dol or and it travel* tba road of all
things In babyiand-thv* road to hi* mouth. Then you remember the grimy 1 hand* of the cashhoy who brought-you i that dollar, a oashto/ with-weii, U*er«) Is no time for detain* This to \hu time ; for diversion. You must divert baby a !
mind once more. And so It goes. Even when the little rascal to naughty,
und know* it. you must not punish him. j You must do some more diverting He to j
to to quite a boy ndw. and as
you ought to be an qdept tn dl
by this tim.-. When he slaps h* little sister you must divert his mind also mile sister’s. When he pulls his company's hair, you must distract hto attention. Hto company will thank you. Wh<u he marks all over the pages of
ir editions de luxe you must divert by telling him how leadpenctl* are
■nanutactured. It is a great theorv and a great practice The, results ought to
to* both fearful and wonderful.
_o A HMXKD INDUSTRY.
thousand* of dollars could be washed out In a day Of course, this news created the greatest excitement. Hto friends prepared to accompany him back, but ere the day for their departure arrived, ihe Frenchman was taken tu and died. Just before hto death he managed to gasp: "Blackfoot country; two small lakes;
cabin between them I built. 1 '
Now this Information was very Indefinite. There are two Blaokfoot countries. One to that great expanse of forest in which rise the Big Blackfoot river and Its tributaries; th# other wa«. In those days, the eastern slope of the Rockies,
New York Post. Paper-makers are beginning to discredit tho doubt about the durability of their modern product. "I find," said one of them in Reads street yesterday, "that from the beginning of paper-making people have questioned its lasting qualities. Yet the old Italian and German papers
tales our hope for th* future. Britain and-Japan buy our paper machines. yet even wore they to use Amulean machine* exclusively. It to declared by an expert in a recent Paper Trade Journal that ’it to safe to say tnat the cost a pound for tabor In the paper mtlto of tho United States to little. If any. more than In the mills of the Old World.” Paper-making, at least, to not among the American Industries that cry for a “protective tariff"; n can hold ifs own just by virtue of the country’s natural resources end the energy and in-
ventiveness of its people. »
MOSTA’S LITTLR-KSOWY DOME.
dynasty in Beejapore, who died in 16*9.
so that the building to nearly contempt*- _ * 1
!»• T VJu , n» Special
Groat hurled under It with the simple tnaerto- , ■*'
tion. "Sultan Mohammed, a dweller tn ;
' Internally, the extreme plainness of the ! McBr&VCr,
Mosta dome Increases Its anpearauee of stoe. n to perfectly smooth, and if the
exterior was as simple, the building ! 01*1 I'Wi'if Pt»rti*4a»» would be much more axreeable. It to WIU vratoal 1 vppci » built of a beautiful yellow atone, but I a a I? I>r»rvrtov lH»ssesees no architectural merit other ; J*»&• rcppC-I*
: Finch Golden Wedding
of mongrel carvings and moldings of a “ I ” “ *
very debased kind.
doom to certain destruction should you j have endured to this day; and, although exploit this ground. Nor can I see that ; we have used new processes and maby digging this gold you could possibly tertais in the tost fifteen or twenty yeare.
benefit yourselves. As you have lived before, in the midst of peace and plenty, so you can continue to live. You may still trap the beaver, the otter, and the wolf, and kill the game for the simple wants of yourselves and your families. But the church forbids you to mine this gold. It forbids you ever mentioning to any one the discovery we’ have made this day. Some time, perhaps, should the church be sorely pressed she may take the gold here found to preserve herself from the assaults of the wicked, but should that day never come, then let us bury deep in our bosoms the location of
this place.’’
Back from the creek where they were camped, some two hundred paces, was a little bare butte, or hlH. and on thy top
getting
for vott, you ought to be an qaepi in m- , nays, me eastern sione or me rvoeaie*. verting by this time. When he St*ps_hto from the Missouri to the Saskatchewan.
^ miners wondered which one he meant. Party after party was organtoed to search for the Lost Cahln mine. Both countries have been explored again ! and again. Year after year has gone | by. and parties are still searching for It, ucd«»im«d by the failure of their predecessor*. hop ng e *; thX( the -aorrew \ wut revcT, to them two little lake* I Hug in the depths of the forest, and ^ tween, a rude HtU* cabin, long since m
your him
we know of notfcuig which really makes the durability of present papers problematical.” Recently, in England, a ccrr.mission was appointed to finally report upon tho question, after using all mean* of inveeilgatioti and applying ill
possible tests.
Of course, the interest in this question has been owing to the other question involved. Was printing soon to ius deprived of its character as "the art preservative?’’ It was feared that wood could not, as web as rags, withstand tne influence of air and time, especially after chemicals bad been used In turning tt into paper. But in this country wood
. .. .. ... -. . .. ■ _ v - . has served as the basic material for Uurcros*. wWch^he^ttshtoUed'with Sr ^^haTse^rd^' axes from a tree growing hv the oank *e«™ed- *n Germany it has served du.of the stream, and when they had fin- Ins * longer period-slnce Keiier discovished It and firmly planted ft In the i ered that wasps made their peets of a ground, the father made them all swear stuff woven froth wood fiber, and Voelter that never, so long as they lived, would ; invented a machine th*. would reduce
>**** nti wood to an elementary state a* well cs
a wasp coulo do It.
the church’s command was law. kept the I Paper Made la Aanerieu
%*x» h *-h,° ."S; »««« •»
married to a Blackfoot woman often used ca than eisr before anywhere, and for to ’tell her that the church kept them books It to unnecessary to use the ground poor, and be would tell her about finding WO od. Wood papers arc of two kinds; they*eiiett-d d thi^cro^' making : ??roai " 1 anrt chemically prepared- Ground there, swear by it that they would never P a P er ** b rittle, the grir ing being
they divulge the location of or themselves dig the placers found that day. And these poor, ignorant voyageurs, to whom
figttsrin* attention to-be recounted to flagar Raising Rapidly Passing , ‘perhaps bur still the evidence of ! dl * ** «* where It was. When this 1 fats! to the liber, and, as It discolor*
I: *
proud mamma when they got homo. The mirpems d of this UUsr day civilisation to sot so. Mhe regards an approaching 11ranger x* she would a kMnapuei. and nit* can flrssto a kto* upon tho most
llpa.
Dentes the Mother Lips. v*n the mother heart dsnles the mothsr Upf. Even though she to not consalmt* of any outward and visible »dfB of on inward and invlslrle mlcrobs. tho odhsolentlous mother dvos her child ,tb* bsnsfit of the doubt, and does not 'give Wsj to kisses As for the unregenoral* father, who smokes, he is lucky to b* allow*4 to stand afar off ami gaas HiS child Tho cultivators have spared to impress upon him the uui of a man who would »»»• preach. with hto "tobacco-tainted broxth." ’he freoh suocOptiblHty of a
iN *hy-
r Thsr* l»*vs .Uways bseu, and protiahly thwo still are, parents who are fit sub.toots for th* fool-ktltor. A type which 1* vary common In this class to that of the father* and *u«>thore who feed their babtoh on any old thing that comes
Qoitorally the father due* U be-
lt entertain* him The mother It bsoans t it to east*' than to refuse the child- For sums unexolalusd reason, a father of this variety to enor mously proud when the baby eata oabbtgo anu pirate* and fried sausage. Hv nay* that the yougstrr has a cast-iron tdomach, and hv tells with unbridled
hto kid’ll eat anything you give
u. i: the children of such a man live to nse up and call him cursed, he get*
no more thnp U* deserve*
Th« child culUvators t row fiio w!i*n they run across such a man. They to th* the other extreme, in fact, they go Rronty other extresaka In tks center. Instance is the man who seems to re-
Away la British West ladles
New York Tnbunu.
The Hritteh colonies which liave suffered moat from the condition of tho sugar Industry are Barbados*. 8t Kitts and Nsvts, Antigua and Guiana. The cultivation of sugar on these island* has not been given up, biU to Indeed in a desperate condition- Owners of estate* having their capital invested in land and mills, reluctant to lo*e thu whole of It. keep up cultivation at a loss. Therelorv. the writer »aw on all i^e Island* all the stkffea of sugar-mising. Troni tho brown fields stuck with slips of cane to th-» grinding of the cane In the mitto In Doroerern. where th« soaaon to earlier than on the Island*. The culttvatlou oo»tlmiew in tho hope that England wilt do something for the relief of her colonte* although the only action of the government. the appointment of tho Norman
commission, ended In nothing.
A vast number of eqtates on the island.* have changed hands within the to#*, two yeare. Tho industry to without credit. Capita! to chary of a losing venture, and the uwne.’ who ha# not means of hto own to forced to sell out at a sacrifice. Mortgaged estates, and there have been many mortgaged In recent year# to tn- ! traduce improved machinery, have suffered especially. The condition tn Santa Crux, one of the Danish West Indies.
untold wealth. To Huai Gouts.
One autumn, not many years ago. the Blackfoot man and the writer went up into the mountains to hunt goats and bighorn. We took an old Indian trail up the Cutbank stream, crossed the divide —the "backbone of the world.” as the Indians say—over a steep slope of shellrock resting on a cliff thousands of feet
man fell sick and died, hto wife married an American, an employe of the American Fnr Com pain and she repeated to him what her former husband had told her about the mine. And he and others went often to look for the ground, but they never found It. Numbers of parties have searched for It. but always In
vain.
Lost PlaPer of Misaeuri. Then there to the lost placer of the Missouri. In JSSfe. two men named
high, and pitched our camp several miles «**• and Loph y, owned a little bunch
of cattle and also a place:' claim on Silver cresk. not far from Helena. The
down the western slope. Early t£e next morning we were afoot and climbed a high ridge to the south. Reaching the crest, we sat down U> rest and get our wind. Far below us at the.’foot of the ridge, fed by tho eternal snows on the summit, were two small lakes, exactly
cattle wore Increasing and the placer was paying very well, but not enough to satisfy Kelso. So one day he started off with saddle and pack outfit to hunt richer gro ind, leaving hto partner to look after the cattle and the mine. Nothing
quicklj. to used only for newspaper* and
of the oW one; and It was also decided that the old church should not be removed until the new one was ready to occupy. Here was a dilemma. The whole metier, however, was left in the hands of the priest and the mason. There two men set about the work, built the new church over the old one. and as soon as It was ready the old church was carted away so rapidly that not even a single Sunday's service was —*“ ‘
The great dome was hull* aid of scaffolding within, yet
of the largest In the world, and to oon sidered among the finest. The mason who erected this structure applied many original and novel devices that are not jiertnisslbto In general building practice, yet time has proved that his methods were in the mam correct, for, so f*r as
be discovered, the
The Pantheon high, but It has
Inside.
In the eenter of the broad, deep valley. s wms Q f Kelso until the following ! The stream connecting them meandered spring when he arrived at Fi. Benton through a wide bed of gravel and sand. on the first steamboat, having boarded > "Lost FqMn mine,” cried the Blackfoot j u a t Ft Copeland, which was situated ! man i in the second bend of the Missouri above \ "Hure,” 1 said. "and‘ Jus* look at the : the mouth of Mitk river. It was said goat- over on that knob.” afterward that he visited Ft. Copeland "To thunder with them ' he replied, several times during the winter, going and fairly flew down the mountain, the there for supplier, and that on one of
these visits he pointed toward the east, tub a little south of tho river valley, and
exclaimed mysteriously; "There ts roy country! ’
When Ketoe arrived at F*t. Benton he brought with him IS.000 in gold dust, and
may be accepted as typical. Bart ram
* New York.
■ II* Why. . ^
are tho Child cultivator*. This r everything except milk to a !te next one admits a Httlo meat, at potatoes. The next rec-
but rolta Hto eye* at RMI9I.-V The next one
head at both meat gml pota•eoimnends oatmeal and wheat Another puts his trust in Had egg And *•> it goes. It to _ enough, but there is envouK in th# fact that mothers seem grasped the idea that babies arv
•hopper*.
men and women to b«, who are of this decade, turn out to be physically than there parents rents, then there is nothing training Every item of a >he. svsry act of Its Ilf* is
write.* foUcwlng closely.
All that day we aearchel between the two lakelets for signs of a cabin, and no» finding any. we made ail sorts of cxt uses An avalanche might have carried
amhor* a Tort. ao. T ratoci^. Ourtug the last '-ear theiragt-nt washing pan after pan of gravel, ing a Urge fiutbo.it. he went up to Silver in Santa Crux, ('apt, A. J- BlacHwood. 1 I* 1 )* *< * 4i * labor lost; not a color of creek after hto partner. Arriving there, ho# taken ui* eleven catates, on which the | not a grain of black sand was to he told Leptoy that he had discovered the held mortgagee and Whose own- f ave “ U P and turned . nc h«»t place.’ dow n the river that he had
unable to carry tlwm any U» h^^with toir gimo^ [ever aeon wfe ttoT^churclT to mtxvdJ^Manv 1,1 lli& and the p,IU5er ^ ^ b * ^‘iit^me* H 1 t2?t SS
y all means
make more out
"“S* z£"t£S?* '■ S.'S’.jTSt XJ **" ,B * n w * JwaJi 1 th* eJate# bXa' ccnereilv determimsl to visit the different tribes ,!)L fini^’was cautious. to «ni.Ul New 'processes In the making of fr^^heVwaStfre I whl ' h l ** u he " we * lb ®. W# sugar tiave mn been Huroduckd. indeed. ItlpDei» uuT mAter^ .if' aealp and the title of cattle king, for he the oW windmdto for grinding sugar can 5lx t^ct^mi m him .11 ^ ni,w UDe the ° vn * n ,<M M ** «£““S^5££. ,, 5 K?."T"or mix" I “ f ,0
torlsy. With ^: French ami Indian, and, like himsof burnhjg °T A v ; ,rue Uathollcx. who believed the church lacking.. The vrenderful^fectility ^f the j to ^ supreme in all ihing*. both spir-
concent ere were It tiger.,
Uarbadoee suffers greatly from the de-
...T n, «" ^ re- _ Ji... ... 0 « *%. trada. It h.is a dense i a * i ' in *r» came to tne American ''««*** „ if ,, child a* a garbage crematorj’. Jt^ut Tldl lierecns to the ‘• ur <-ouitoin> s post oi the upper Mto- 4110 * uwTv hut ^ of dlgeai lug even thing that i^n'e atS no Industry but siigar- 1 Abe aswlous Jesuit missionary Path- ,hem \tv «r mak
l.w i. The lil.laxtr!- there I, ; Jf' 1 ,' o,„ of thl. In
can be discovered, the church stands as
books not meant to last- Of the them- »°fid to-day as when built, and thj great
ically prepared there are two varieties--the sulphite and the soda These chemicals separate the wood into fiber, and the sola, though manufacturers are not so .sure regardirg sulph te. produces a lasting article. Nearly all New York newspapers use ground-wood paper; that ot the Evening l ost, however, is only 15 l*r cent, ground-wood, the remainder
sulphite fiber. Lately an all-wood sen - —
lovable book, magazine and lithographing i Sc. Paul’s, London--Hight.
paper has been produced, and litho- f diameter, lux feet,
graphing paper ha» been produced with Santa Sophia, ronstaiHinople a mixture of soda and sulphite. It isn’t [WS feet; diameter. W tret, as tough as though made partly of rags, t The dome of Moata to 300 feet
fpr wood fiben* at best are straight, and lie almost parallel. Instead of Intertwining. as linen or cotton fibers will do. Rags ore chiefly used now for writing and bond papers. Old linen rags and new cotton clippings siaed with animal glue combine in the finest papers known, ana they are made not by hand but by machine. Holyoke, bring near the cotton factories of New England, turns out j most of tlu fine papers: Niagara Falto, Glens Falls, a valley in Wisconsin, points near the Maine rivers—places to which spruce timber con be easily transported, and from which the finished product can 1 he shipped In many directions—are
famous for wood papers.
The largest paper machine tn the world i to be In Schuylerville. this Btate,
a-b fecu
Wight,
uvs i«ei; uiaimuer. 1V< reel.
» The dome of Moata to 360 feet high. and 124 foot in diameter, being l« feet 1 larger than the great dome of 8t. 1’aul’s. • One of th* largest domes Jn India, the land of do ihe*. to thht of Ool G(mma at ! BeeJapore, which to 175 feet high ;'.fid 124 ‘ feet in diameter, ranking, like that of Mosta. between fit. Peter’s and fit. Paul’s. The exterior hight is lift feet. This dome covers the tomb of Mohammed Shah, the sixth king of the Moslem
DONE SO QUIETLY
company hto partner, he tried to keep K< toe from going back, representing the extreme danger there was of being killed bv the Indians, and. indeed, at that time, and for years afterward, the Missouri
soil producing n cane peculiarly rich In i | tual ai *d temporal avoohnrtae jMHttcr to all that has kept Leaving the fort, which
at the mouth of the Marias river, itu.-, .
weal up th* valley of the Teton until listen, Ltpioy went with him as
the trade alive in that island.
Tho islands of St. Kitts and Antigua suiter similarly from the lack of other indiiatrlea aad indeed, though the population to far »es> dense, the evidences of poverty are greater, tr. Antigua there
Is only Ot;v central factory, and in 8t. wanovrings norvn anu s,nev ;ourKRts Lut a few. The *ugar manufact- | ney«d jUong verj slowly, for they toad
along the great trsil which the tribes j with p^teiooa. mining tooi* and had used for untold centuries in their j urnt *. r for sluUe boxes, and they were,
wanderings north and south. They jour- | o£ lX)Uni e t well arawd
One morning early In May they swung
were
ingly dolicatv eelcnThe temperature of
exceed!! uration.
ratheil must not be too high, itry of overheated houses <uh> i guard tvgaiu.st the other vxba*L must he teatsd with a
r, the soap
t advert'
im
P must be of *be>ttaad at least), tho nbued with certain I'ghfiug quail tie* the comiweased. but must
i meal* fff» by the tick of the i all things pertaining to 1nhcaven also, order to tho
X*« Punish Him.
morally, the bahy of i*for with equal consetenMaybe the methods are the la^ae of a few decade*, IT to prove that. It is thing nwwadays to pun-
net as that produce*! by more modern machinery. In St Kitts there has been rioting by negroes who could not find emptovmvnt on too estates, and the Whites fear further outbreak*. Decorating. I Washington Stir. "IsiYt it h*aut‘fuir’ she Inquired rs she droppetl »n armful of nusiletoe on the floor.
ha.— **
••Ye*.” he answeted to put *U that
’Tmi are not on the thande-
"Oh. r.*u tV* are going to ra.vk* cenopr of It for the entire eeliin*.”
The Tremble. ■ ; Atchison GtoOr
P ■ ■ PBPPM, gHde swiftly around the t>end and out of west, hoping to find Indian* ■ amped ! an d he thought then that he along the valleys at the different W ouk : never see Kelse again. And he streams, but none was found. In fact, qaiii’t- The men have «sever been seen tbej did not encounter a living ooui uu- since Their boa; was never round, nor til tvej I v*de Into Mountain Fori, on the an vthlng etoe which could be Identified Saskatchewaiv, «»ne of the Hudson Bay . us *ibeini- Their fate to bat another of Company’s pouts. lh€[ mysteries srttkh thai weird and f hewoped Some rood. treacherous river, those tangled growths
Is Z
boiled a kettle of fai buffalo ribs. ar*»i years hunting for this placer, sod more after the meal was finished oik of the recemto- there have been one or two parmen went to the stream to wash rise ties in she field -very season In oeareh of vessel. He acooped some sand into IL it. thus far without sucees*. It may I and began to tvour the greasy side*. ' h«rer be fonnd. Tht country to of vast 1 every now and then throwing out tto? sand if• »Ti 0l ^.'Z * £ ia 5 faa ^
and water and scooj«ng up a clean sup-
Tbe Double Is **ry gftrt to oW ehaugb) PlY- When he Had about fiatohed, and rivm*. bad
a Ksw J*r I IbifrfYHt-t'- Sih#' ifS vi 111 AfYffstZs* H 1 til A
Ui be married before* she ts old enough • th# water remained dear In — to have any sense - 1 .noticed some yellow gleams among the weolthles*
.
posit and of limited area. But where along those «*• taiies of winding
I land, coulee and bluff. Me* a the pot. he . patch of placer ground which the
KTondiker would tine despise.
to said
and the smalleot tn Newark. N. J.; the one. If erected tn a straight line, as is ' the custom, measuring 375 feet in length, and the other, used for getting out samples. being only thirteen feet—even a toy f paper machine betnc a considerable monster as machines go. N-*twithsrtar.il-ing the Increase of fine papers, imports ' of rag* are comparatively small. Russian linen rags have almost stopped coming; Catania and Trieste. Salonua sad Constantinople have ceased to fur- * pish any rags, though twenty years a*,
they sent here thousands of tons. R«g Coll ret log Has Fallow Off. It must have been observed by
body that the business of rttg-colfeciiag
' Indianapolis People Are Surpi tsed—L ke a Kay of Sunshine
To Many a Home
lany a
It comes like a ray of sunshine. Makes the old folks happy. And the young toiks Joyrul. Take* the load off the back. It’s all done so quietly. No fues about it.
w h«t .-ts ur
'Why, 'Doan’s Kidney Pills:
The little Kidney W odder-W orkt is.
W hat will tliey *lo?
Road what a citiaen says;
Mr. William H. Waltera of IMS Kn#li*h , avenue, says: *T was altliet.d with klu-
everv-1 trouble for twelve years. I tried
nearly e\ ery medicine that was brought
. to my attemton, treated with phyiicitmR
has fallen off at horn*, snd thereby we and even went to the hocpltsi. but l have *» but lost two rather picturesque steadily srrew worse and during the past feature* of our country and city roads— year diabetes set in .and increased m>
misery I had. little or no control ovti the kidney secretion* and had to rto’ very frequently at night. The pain* through my back, sides and groin werealmost unhearaide. I had about given u» all hope of evsr getting relief when my
cfxhib: y*** 11 tire TTk/woitm' 1 *** iJ’iAw-,.
attention was called Pills, and I on!allied
the tin peddler's cart, and the Irish hand-cart ragman, with hto string of
bells.
In spite of the size ami alacrity of it# present production, one of the problems of paper-makers is-how to Inereas# the output. Not long ago the staff of a paper machinery firm were called to the office of the senior partner, who reminded them that year* ago he' had un-ed them to try aad get out ,% machine that would make 3«* feet of paper a minute: that later he h* 1 ecppcH^-d to them for a machine with a capacity of add feet a ‘ minute: that now a speed of 512 feet nsl !
ItoV 1 W£**1 ^rrecommer.aeo iris valuable remedy to II
^Trc i nil ! ■■•RF of my acquaintance* whom I knew ..
>a>ir-j? ii-w tt,ry must *«-hr, had tro’ifc*!*' *rd I ttok# paper ma. himto making eheets of news- ; JSs5?e indoini *1, af Si ti»«.” ? FyfT ■ *?f*^*f^■ 1 ,JM ’ f< *‘ t 1 ° a * r.'e.y j Boar.’* Kidney Pllle are for sale by all “-IP ut ® , of ‘ i>e . “ m , i dealers, price 5u cents. Mailed by Kovtcr-
P****** t?**9J** .*5^' : P-membi the L£l ln d^W™ ou^£~ r 'Sp^.^uTle ’ tak * ^
_____ ' '
The man
who neglects his health for the sake of the excitement of work and money. getting, is dancing with
Death. It is a dance in which Death always comes oat victor. If • man will only spare
time to take
An Oddity in Construction. It Ranks Between St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s. Architecture end Building. There are few places in tho world where one may stand and count, within range of the naked eye. thirteen domes, among which is one of considerable dimensions; yet this can be done on the Island of Malta. Standing on a hill above Sllema. a short distance from Valeria. thirteen domes are within sight, and that of Moata to one of them, towering high above Its neighbors, Mosta is a squalid villa*** situated about four miles from the city of Valeria, huV-ftt one time it was a town of considerable
importance.
In the early part of the present century the villagers and cure, finding the old church too small to accommodate the Increasing population, determined to enlarge the church or build another. Tht village mason was consulted, and, after
several confabs over the m uter. It was j- nf
decided to build a new' church altogether. S**®*®*^ n.,wnwi it ^ and that It must l>e built on the stu liver •ad punnes the blood. It tones the * ’ nerves. It makes pure, Hch blood, builds
firm healthy flesh, and strong, elastic mu* de. The man who resorts to it whenever he feels out of sorts, may, within reason, work as hard as be pleases. Druggists
sell it.
care of health, to eat, aof rest and sleep properly, snd when he feels slightly indisposed will resort to the right remedy, he may work as hard as he pleases, and pile up money steeple high, without fear of un-
timely death.
The worst enemy with which hard-work-ing men have to contend is a disordered digestion. It is the starting point for most sickness and disease. Dr. Fierce’• Golden
16 North Meridian Street
find ii ons-cent damps,’ Donley Co.,
rs* omitted, per covers. I h*vc been taking Dr.
Without the (.olden Medical Discovery for the blood at el It to one think it is the best blood-purifier in existence.”
One of the best-known of American medical men said : *‘ If you want to reform a man. begin with hto grandfather.’’ That f would be wise if it could be done. Since It I cannot be done, try something else. Reform the future grandfathers and grandmothers. Do this through education. The greatest thing for a man or woman to know is him.
„ self or herself. To know one-half the capg-
aswss&t jssssss-s ’ importance of that of Mosta: coucsuoq to,or. pierces Lommon Sense St. Peter’s. Romo, to m fret in hight. {M f< *» ca ,\.AWer Any one «n havs this ’ with an interior diameter of :17 feetf finely illustrated tooo-page book for the The Pantheon Rome, to only 14ft feet ,mil " Price of twentr-one one cent atamns.
Merit Wine If U didn't, there would b« ro use In effort, and no effort fnr Itrogic**. Our mwt'iods have won succ-ss. That tti'git.js the merit of .slncerit.’ m ,»ur claims, and. leaves mrinh.g worth claiming uiichilm*'d, either. Painless dwnttotry; moderate charges; warrarted. Cures dread. COIGHLIY * WILfiOA,'] DENTIST*. Cor. Market A Penn. Sts.. 8. W.
.„ price of twenty-one one cent stamps. .
,«bias
8t. Marla. Florence—Highi S7T) fret; t Instead of paper, send thirty-one atfimpa to i diameter. 137 fret. World’s Dispensary Medical AasoatoliaB,
663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
•••••••• ••••♦ •••••••«•••• OUR STOCK OF CHILDREN’S SHOES in now larger and better than it tin* been at* any time before We call special attention to uur line in Mlaaes’ «!z *» (1H to 2), Children’s sizaa (Hi to 1)), at #1, In Dongota kid. with patent leather tips; Dongoia, with kid tips and heavy solen. and Kangaroo Calf, m button or lace. These are shapely shoes that #U and wear.
Holiday Rates feufiier U, U. tl snd January tickets to Ow IHtblto St uM and 0»e- « for tbs rtiur.il trip to »il point* la trutenger ComnuttM torritsry, fsod
On DsesnOier M. it.
vtlfasil
third lore
st UjS'rioctnr s^ths term sad so ,K por* t!ekets"*n4 n fu|7 inVormstt* sgsata No. I K. Wsshlnston st.
information eat! oa
., ^....Jmrton st„ Mawseku-
sad Bafon station.
H. M BRONSON. A, O. P. M
• IfftT lilt TO
CINCINNATI
MDIIIHOini
Leave Indianapolis-
CtiK'Innatl V##U rinricnsit Fast
Cincinostt. Day ton. Tol-'i
.to Malar
• Ai-o just received Misses', f Children’s auri Infanta’ /shoes. I same a* above cat: neat and
I nobby.
\7/ori/ffs.
, siavS5-wi^*““
: SKSNsa; £
* f^. ,y aroyW.-HAYUCR U. F. A Ithe monon route
TO CHICAGO
THAW, UUVT. niDIAKAKlU,. , MS a m . »:» **J**J-"-:J**'**\ TRAIN* ARIrtVR IWDIAXAPOI.Ii: • « U* a_«t 1 *:4i p- m-. 4« a «.
pjfnt Ty
• ,''1* *** jr
to Donn e Kidney ! » box at Henry- J. i •
Huder’s drug store, twk them as direct- • ed, and in a few day* I felt the beneficial 1 effect of their uee. and I contlmivd th^ » _ treatment until I had used two boxew. i don’t want to convey the impreselon that l Doan’* Kidney PlHs are curing rov paralyei- but they were effective In curing' my kidney trouble. I am feeling bette.
ie. tnat ntrw a upreo 01 ie« 1 to ^ 9y thiSn , hav< . for.yeara. and I have be * n I recommended this valuable remedy
•••••••••••• ♦ ••••••••••••
iS-iWYinniiaiRiR i NEW SLEEPING CAR LINE
p»fm »i 11
' —TO—
IISIII1, D. C.
DOAN’S, and
CASTORIA For Infssts sad Ckildreh. &&&&&£& is
1
Nalli
BilCO Olid
Don’t Stop 1obacco *m**rmif , ~
T*k* 84
*•« *rU . Mtac
ft- —01
Acme Lights
Save G-s Bill* t Tor Sal# Mr r. L irntn'M taom. attacks* •*. Best tamp in tbe
market.
••ooKAI
-rt-a. hr mj
Irtarc..
SAI
It Gently
Weans
At Ai»V RKfa 00-,La ».
Complete 85c 10c add. pat up.
Mantle* 2 Sc
aod 30c,
'WOMAN’S TRIUMPH.” s «s-psg« fteefe roots:ring valuab;* hafematioa which svsry woman should know shoot herself, seat .res LYDiA FINK HAM, LYNN, MASS
Leavs Indianapolis
,.JU
Arrive Washiogtoq .0.— too change of cart er tressfsi .
Dtsiog ears
•n route.
W. RICH A R Di-OX.
Lsavs
e*
VAN O ALIA
&uaw&m\Xt, btvd I !t?r2.:zrsL u $£ sleeper on n.-» a tn- tratn.
