Jasper County Democrat, Volume 6, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 August 1903 — Page 7

SARTO IS ELECTED.

ITALIAN 18 CHOBEN HEAD OF CATHOLIC WORLD, Pope Piua X. Understood to Hive Keen Leo’s Favorite- New Pontiff Is 08 Years of Age—Known as the Patriarch of Venice.' Cardinal Giuseppe Sarto, Patriarch of Venice, was elected as the successor to Pope Leo XIII. Tuesday'on the seventh ■ballot of the conclave in Rome. He luis taken the name of Pius X. The new Pope is not so well known as some of the other cardinals who were leading candidates for the head of the church, but he ia said to be very pious, yet broad and liberal minded. Pina X. is the two hundred and thirty-fourth successor to Peter the Fisherman. It was not more than a year before his death that Leo,' in conversation with Father Lorenzo Perosi, the Italian composer, referred to Cardinal Sarto, the patriarch Of Venice, in now historic terms: “Hold him very dear, Perosi,” said his holiness on that occasion, referring to Sarto, “as in the future he will be able to do much for you. We firmly believe he will be our successor.” Cardinal Giuseppe Sarto was born in 1835 and in his (58th year is raised to the papacy. He was created Cardinal and Patriatch of Venice by the consistory of June 12, 1893. The new Pope was born in Riese, in the province of Venice, on June 2, 1835. His education he received at the SalosiSb Institute at Cattolougo. His work as a priest lay within Venice, where.he had a palish of the poorer districts, to the members of which he gave close attention, ministering to their wants and infirmities. From this ecclesiastical position he became Bishop of Venice, rising from that port to the cardinalate. During his career as a priest he attained a considerable reputation as a preacher and an author, and it is said of him that he has never yet failed to accomplish what he set out to do. When the count showed that the necessary two-thirds of the total number of

COLLEGE OF CARDINALS VOTING FOR POPE LEO’S SUCCESSOR

votes cast had been obtained tie doors of the Sistine Chapel were opened by the secretary of the conclave. Mgr. Merry Del Val, and the masters of ceremonies were admitted from Doydon College. The secretary then asked the successful cardinal: ‘•Do yon accept the election?'’ and received a reply in the affirmative. AH the throne canopies were then lowered, with the exception of thirt of the successful candidate. The masters of ceremonies next conducted the new I’ope to the robing closet, where be laid aside the robes of cardinal and donned white stockings, red dippers, the long white tunic, white girdle, white cap and the red cape of the papal office. He returned to the chapel and was seated on a chair placed on the highest step of the altar, where the cardinals approached one by one, kissed the foot and then the hand of the new prelate and <hen received the benediction of the Pope. The new Pope was then given the fisherman’s rWR which h£ immediately returned for the purpose of having his name engraved upon it. _ An hour after the ballots had been counted and the result made known to tlie members-of the sacred college of cardiiials, Cardinal Macchi, Secretary of Apostolic Briefs, announced to t)he great crowd assembled in front of the Vatican the name of the successful candidate for the throne of St. Peter on earth and the papal name chosen by him. Ten minutes later Pius X. appeared ineide the bajcony of the basilica, and lifting his arms above his head gave his first pontifical blessing to the populace and to the world. Many Fraitl«» Ballot*. The cardinals in conclave for the pujp pose of electing a successor to Pope Leo took their fifth ballot Monday morning, with no result. At IDO®' ranoke was seen congng out of the chimney over the Sistine (Si a pel, which indicated that no selection had been made. At 6:25 p. in., after the sixth ballot, smoke again rose from the chapel. Monday was the third day of the cardinals’ imprisonment. In the hope that ov«r night an agreement might have been reached, the foreign ministers, many other personages and two or three thousand of the general public went to St during the morning to await developments. They were doomed to another disappointment. The result of Sunday morning’s ballot was awaited by 2,000 or 3,000 persons, who began to suspect that an election had been reached when the hour for the ■moke to Appear passed without a sign.

CAREER Of THE NEW POPE.

IOPE PIUS x.

Date of birth ......June 2, 1835 Place of birth.............. Riese, Italy Began education. College of Castlefranco Pursued studies at.. .Seminary of Padua Finished education at.. Salosiaji Institute First charge Tombolo, Italy Transferred to Salzano 1867 Canon of Cathedral at Treviso Appointed bishop at Mantua Created Patriarch of Venice. June 12, ’93 Created cardinal June 12, 1893 Elected Pope .Aug. 4, 1903 His name as cardinal... Giuseppe Sarto His name as JPope -..Pius X.

METHOD OF CASTING BALLOTS.

Procedure bjr Which the Cardinals Klect a Pope in Conclave. The cardinals, when seated, are surmounted by canopies—violet for cardinals created by the late Pope, green for Oreglia, the only cardinal living who was created by an earlier Tope. Upon a Pope being elected all the cgnopies are lowered, that of the new Pope alone being left standing. A writing table is before each cardinal, besides six more in the middle. The senior cardinal-bishop

occupies a seat on the gospel side of the main altar. The senior cardinal-deacon sits on the opposite or epistle side. Other cardinals, bishops, priests and deacons are arranged around in the order of the date of their creation. Cardinals in their places or at"nny of the six additional tables fill their “sehede,” or voting papers, folding down and sealing the top end of the paper, where the voter’s name is written, and the bottom end, where each writes iKune scriptural motto, which becomes his distinctive mark and which he uses through the election. In the middle of the paper, between the two sealed folds, each elector writes the name •'of the candidate for whom he votes, that name alone being unsealed and open. On the main.altar at the communion table stands a large chalice, covered by a pix. When all are ready each cardinal in turn steps up to the altar, swears aloud that his vote is given upon conscientious conviction, then lays his paper on the pix, and raises and tilts the pix, letting his paper slide into the chalice. When all have voted the scrutineers examine the papers, read and tell the candidates’ names, breaking no seals. Should none of the candidates obtain the legal number of votes (two-thirds of the votes, with one additional), the afternoon, an “accereit” ballot becomes necessary. Each voter is then allowed to change his mind, or forsake his morning candidate, whom he may consider hopeless, and “accede" or join his vote to that of any other candidate who has already secured votes in the morning and may have a better chance. In this case the voter’ writes in his paper “atjcpdo” before tlie name of big hew candidate. If he wishes to abide by his morning vote, he write*" “accedo nemini," thus confirming his morning vote. The ScrutiueerS again read and tell the vjtes, unsealing the bottom end of the voting papers, to establish the identity of the morning and evening vote of each elector by the scriptural motto distinguishing him, without, however, breaking the seal at the top end, where the voter's name is \*.itten, which remains a secret If neither at the morning nor evening ballot any of the candidates has obtained the legal number of votes, the papers are burnt with damp straw, emitting a dense smoke, and this emoke, arising from the well-known chimney, informs the outer world that no Pope has been made, and that a new ballot has become necessary. Should any candidate obtain precisely two-thirds of the votes, his own voting paper moat be singled out and the seal concealing hia name broken to make sure that he has not voted for himself. If be has sot done so his election is valid.

INDIANS AND “A BIG FIRE.

To Be Among the Spectacular Pant* urea of Chicago's Centennial. A replica of the great fire of 1871, which swept over nearly all of the business district and a large part of the residence section and left a trail of ruin and desolation in its trail, is to be one of the sensational features of Chicago’s centennial jubilee week celebration this fall. The spectacle, which will far surpass any like production ever witnessed except in realism, will be called “The Burning of Chicago.” One thousand tons of Roman fire will be put on the roofs of aii the skyscrapers of the city, and many other building?, ns well, in the various divisions of the city, until the area covered by the fire is represented. The red fire will be ignited simultaneously and it will burn for two hours. From the O’Leary home in DeKoven street, where the fire etarted, a long flight of bombs will memorialize the famous cow which kicked over the lamp which ignited the straw which communicated to the building Which spread the fire all over the town. Extensive plans are being made for the celebration, and during the week the city will be in gala attire and businees generally suspended. There will be at least two full holidays, on one of which there will be a big military and civic parade. Another of the special features now being worked out is an Indian village and a reproduction of the old Fort Dearborn, including the famous attack on the fort by Indians, the flight of the handful of men and women and children under the escort of Indians supposed to be friendly and the consequent massacre on the lake front Old and wealthy Chicagoans will take part In this extravaganza. The celebration will take the place of the regular fall festival. Arrangements are now being made with the railroads for reduced fares, and the week will be the most spectacular in the city’s history since the World’s Fair. Many of the statues and arches used in the street decorations will be permanently located in the parks and other prominent places when the celebration is ended.

OUTLAWS’ AIM KILLS.

Two Militiamen Slain and Others Wounded in Battle. According to a Placerville, Cal., dispatch, two fights with the convicts who escaped from Folsom prison are reported. On Saturday eveffhig two of the militiamen were kiliaii and auother wounded in a battle at Grand Victory mine and Sunday night another encounter took place at Dutch Flat. One of the convicts is supposed to have been shot and a number of the posse wounded. The fugitives in both instances escaped. The militiamen slain are Festus Rutherford and W. C. Jones. Jones had served in the Philippines. The following story of Saturday night’s battle wit-h the convicts is told by one of the members of the posse: “Lieut. Smith and seven men of company H of the militia were pursuing a trail that had been discovered earlier in the day. Their first intimation of the presence of the convicts was when the latter opened fire on them at close range from a hiding place in the bushes. Three members of Lieut. Smith’s squad fell at the first volley. “News of the battle spread quickly to Placerville and the surrounding country, and soon the hill was surrounded by a "large force, including the entire strength of the Placerville militia company. Co-operating with the militiamen were a po;~se of citizens from PlncerviHe, headed by the sheriff’s son, Dallas Bosquit. They were within sound and sight of the fighting, but dared not fire for fear of hitting the militiamen. “Lieut. Smith reported that there were fotvr convicts in the band that opened fire on his men, but he was unable to identify any of them except a nqgro, Seavis.”

RIVER COMMISSION REPORTS.

Mississippi Board fends in Annual Statement of Expenditures. The Mississippi river commission has submitted its annual report for the fiscal year ended June 30 to the Wgr Department at Washington. This year the report was given out by the commission in St. Louis instead of at Washington. From the sundry civil appropriation of $2,000,000, approved March 3, allotments for river improvements were made, among which are the following: Mississippi river commission, 327,000; »h arbor at Helena, Ark., 35,000; harbor at Memphis. Tenn. (including Wolf river), 38,000; harbor of Greenville, Miss., 325,000; harbors of Natchez, Miss., and Vjdalia, La., 312,00(J; levees, 31,000,000; surveys; 310,000. The river and harbor bill approved June 13, 15)02, appropriated 32,200,000 for the use of the commission. From this appropriation allotments were made as follows: Mississippi river commission, 310,500: surveys, gauges and observations. 369.000; dredges and dredging, 329,5500; first and second districts, 3540,000; third district, 3633,500; fourth district, 3647,500; in the hands of the president, 34,500. In 1902 323,000 Was appropriated for surveys and examinations for a 14-foot channel from the mouth of the Illinois river to St. Louis. Discussing this work, the report says that under existing conditions systematic work which has for its object the- permanent location and deepening of the channel hns not been practical.

Interesting News Items.

Electric railways hill 100 persons a month. Joshua Butler, wife and child were killed by a train, Port Pokley, Pa. C. Weiss, Syracuse, N. Y., killed his wife and himself while in New York City. Chicago manufacturers will investigate reports that labor unions have been “grafting.” Blade of an electric fan broke, St. Loois, Mo., and struck a man. It ia thought he will die. The school board of Kansas City will pay 14 cents a bushel for coal this year, against 103-5 cents last year. Dealers made an effort to hold up the board for 18 cents a bushel, but the combination was broken. The Superior CAurt at Tacoma, Wash., 1 has upheld Secretary Moody, together with the Mayor and Council of Brementer, in their fight to close every saloon at Bremerton adjacent to the Puget Sound navy yard. An appeal has been taktn to the State Supreme Court, bat in the meantime all salcnna have bees closed.

THE Metamorphosis of Maggie.

“Travel, sure, is a great thing, ain’t IL for expanding the mind and developing the ambitions?” said a man from a little town in Central Penntylvania. “There's an old maid In my town who has been making togs for the women of the place for more yearn, prob’ly, than 6he would care to admit, and, until last fall, the sign tacked In front of the little shack where ahe lives with her parrot and cats read this way: eeaaaaae ee* • MAGGIE MONAHAN, • • Dressmaker. • eeeeee eeeee “Well, after saving up for a good many years for the purpose, Maggie was able, at the close of last summer, to take one of those forty-day Cook's tours of the continong, as they call It I blleve Maggie spent all of four days hi Paris. Anyhow, she hadn’t been' back In the little old Pennsylvania town twenty-four hours before s new sign took the place of the old one that had ornamented her shanty for so long. The new sign read this wayt • eeeeaeeeee • MLLE. MARGUERITE, • • Robes et Manteaux. • , e a ***♦*##* a “Sure, Is broadening, kind o’ travel, hut itr

What was It?

IWarpotnt, Miss., Aug. B.—One »f the strangest cases ever reported occurred here recently. The son of Mr. U. Butler was very 111. The doctor he had some disease of the spinal cord, and treated him for two months, but he grew worse all the time, and finally the doctor told Mr. Butler that he did not know what wtt* the trouble. The boy would wake up In the night and say that he was dying. He would he nervous and trembling and want to run out of the house, saying he saw agly things which frightened him. His father was very much discouraged till one day he saw a new remedy called Dodd’s Kidney Pills advertised, and he at once bought some and began to give them to his boy. He used altogether eight boxes before he was entirely cured. He has sot been troubled since. Mr. Butler says: “I feel It my duty to tell what Dodd’s Kidney Pills have done for my boy. All this remedy needs Is a fair chance and It will speak for Itself.”

New Use for Paper.

Paper gloves and stockings are now being manufactured In Europe. As to the manner In which the former are made little is known, but the stockings have been carefully examined by experts, and they are loud In their praise of them. Let no one assume, they say, that these stockings, because they are made of paper, will ouly last a few days, for they will really last almost bs long as ordinary stockings. The reason, they point out, la because the paper of which they are made was during the process of manufacture transferred into a substance closely resembling wool, and was then woven and otherwise treated aa ordinary wooL

Deafness Cannot Be Cured

toy local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure Deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed Deafness Is tha result, and unless the Inflammation can be token out and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any r» of Dearness (caused by catarrh) that cannot cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure, fiend for dr(Ullfr (tm, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a Bold by Druggists. 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the beet.

Cause and Effect.

When modem fiction writers Serve their thoughts up hot. We get erotic novels. with The accent on the “rot.” The name nicotine is a reminder of Jean Nicot, a French nobleman and embasaador to Portngal. In 1560 he sent a quantity of tobacco seeds from Lisbon to Paris, stating that they were the seeds of a valuable medicinal plant that was just then highly appreciated in Portugal, into which country it had been Introduced from America, forty years before. While a soldier likes ornaments, ht objects to upbraiding.

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Miss-Caiculatlons.

“Whj Ip it,” asked ths Inquisitive youth, “that a girl is said to be of age when she’s 18, while a man doesn’t read) his ma jbrity until he’s 21 ?” “Perhaps,” rejoined the wise guy, “It’s because every girl born In 1882 is celebrating her eighteenth birthday fhle year.”

Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?

Shake into your shoes Allen’s FootEase, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Bhoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy. N. Y.

The Proper Place.

“Bay,” remarked Kerwln, “I’m looking for a ailent partner to Invest tome money In my businees. Where can I find one?” “Well,” ; replied his * friend Parker, “yon might apply at the deaf and dumb asylum.” Two bottles of Plso’s Cure for Consumption cured me of a terrible cough.— Fred Hermann, 209 Box avenue, Buffalo, N. Y.. Sept. 24, 1901. The most elaborate pipes are those of the Turks and Persians. The bowls are large and heavy, not Intended to be Jarried about, and the stems are several set long sad flexible. Some of these pipes cost SI,OOO each. ’ ■ i i ■.. . —, Mr*. Winslow's Soothixo Snur for Children teething; softens the so mi, redness Inflammation, altar* pain, cares wind oolio, 23 cants s bottle.

dHKiMKfStU.. /• ■ A prominent Southern lady," Mrs. Blanchard, of Nashville, Tenn., tells how she was cured of backache, dizziness, painful and irregular periods by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “ Gratitude compels me to acknowledge the great merit of your Vegetable Compound. I have suffered for four years with irregular and painful menstruation, also dizziness, pains in the back and lower limbs, and fitful aleep. I dreaded the time to come which would only mean suffering to me. Six bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound brought me health and happiness in a few short months, and was worth more than months under the doctor’s care, which really did not benefit me at all. I feel like another person now. My aches and pains have left me. I am satisfied there is no medicine so good for sick woman as your Vegetable Compound, and I advocate it to my lady friends in need of medical help.”—Mrs. B. A. Blanchard, 423 Broad St., Nashville, Tenn. — $5000 forftft If original of abovt tetttr proving genulnantu oannot be produced. When women are troubled with menstrual irregularities, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, they should remember there is one tried and truo remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Ivl In time. Sold by droggUU. rl MPBICIABI-lOHK W. MORRIS, IlClldlUll Washington, I>. cl IfSisrasSiMsvstss.S'fJsa ■ lyre In ami war, IS aßastaatins claims, etty since

Bromo-Seltzer Promptly cures all Headaches

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