New Richmond Record, Volume 5, Number 41, New Richmond, Montgomery County, 18 April 1901 — Page 4

there is nothing m them. If you get a very goody-goody boy. look out. There is something behind that sanctimonious air.

“Give me the true hoy, the one who gets into mischief. He is the first to grasp the meaning of the word ‘honor." ”

It Will Be

THE BEST REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM

SURPRISE

QUICK RELIEF FROM PAIN

All who use Chamberlain’s Pain Balm for rheumatism are delighted with the quick relief from pain which it affords. When speaking of this Mr. I). N. Sinks, of Troy, Ohio, says: “Sometime ago I had a severe attack of rheumatism in my arm and shoulder. I tried mfmerous remedies but got no relief until I was recommended by Messrs. Geo. P. Parsons & Co., druggists of» this place, to try Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. They recommended it so highly that I bought a bottle. I was soon relieved of all pain. I have since recommended this liniment to many of my friends, who agree with mo that it is the best remedy for muscular rheumatism in the market.” For sale by J. W. Hollin & Co.,, druggists.

NEW RICHMOND RECORD.

To You To Know That

$1.00 per Year, in Advance.

Thursday, April 18, 1901.

TH§mARSDEN C2

A SCHOOL TEACHER FOR FIFTY-TWO YEARS

A school tearm who lias aided in the education of 1.2,(XH) children talks: “A woman who will study a boy's character and win Ids love will hold him forever. Woman’s influence is paramount in the life of both boj' and man. A wife is the making or the breaking of a man.” This statement was made by Miss Elizabeth Hogan, who with the advent of the twentieth century resigned her position as principal of ..the Saunders school, Twelfth section. Her resignation follows fifty-two years’ work as a teacher. Being a thoroughly feminine woman, while loving the girls who .were her pupils, her heart has gone out wholly to her boys. And there were so many of the latter that she had had ample opportunity to study masculine human nature.

She has instructed (5,000 children in the day schools, and 12,000 men, women and children in the night schools. The years have silvered her hair and written on her brow the peace and calm that only come to those who have striven and conquered, but her heart is as young and untouched by the world as it was in. those far days when she began her life work. “From a child I wanted to be a teacher,” said Miss Hogan. “It was the height of my ambition to instruct the young. To this do I attribute my sneees. To success in anj' line you must love your work. Always my heart went out to the boys. T like their character A woman can do, what she will with a boy if she but tries to understand >im

LINDEN, INDIANA.

Are Selling-

POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

Baled Bedding

The apple of the eye is rather visionary fruit.

All delicate situations are more or less indelicate. Sometimes it is to a man’s credit to forget what he knows. It's all up with some men when they get down in the world. A well-developed conscience will make a hero of almost any man. Don't try to put on too many airs; it may make your friends cold.

„at $3.00 per Ton.

Broadness of some man’s mind is only exceeded by the shrewdness.

The fruit of evil resulted from the eating of the first apple by the first pair. It is said a girl in Boston is so bright that she uses the palm of her hand for a mirror. Maidenhood and womanhood are two hoods that are ever set for the inveiglement of men. Almost any evil can be remedied if you face it fearlessly and honestly try to remove it. A rainbow never appears until after the storm —and the same is very often true of a policeman. There are two kinds of family jars. Into one you put preserves and into the other you put your foot.

Some of it is good enough for Feed.

Call and see it at the Factory.

THE SHIRTWAIST OF 1901

nit, mode and tan will bo greatly worn. The advance assortment of summer shirt waists shows dainty muslins, batistes and mull in the pretty pale colors, and one feature of their decoration is an applique embroidery of flowers and leaves in color, and sometimes combined with white. Essentially dainty R*re. French shirt waists in soft muslins a little off the white, such as pale pink, blue, lavender, yellow and green. These last two shades are particularly prominent in the latest.

If only one of the million flowers that bloom in the summer days, in the fields and gardens, refused to bloom, hiding its gift of beauty, the world would be a little less lovely. If but one of the myriad stars in the heavens should refuse to shine some night, keeping its beam locked up in its own breast, the night would be a little darker. So every human life that to

WRITES AM AMERICAN NOV

While the feminine world still clings to the shirt waist, it has absolutely discarded all masculine effects, and the result is, that the new shirt waist is delightfully feminine. The cuffs have veered to soft-tucked and frilled wristbands. They are not wider than two inches and they have tucks, insertion and ruffles of lace and embroidery. Cuff links are no longer worn; instead the new cuff has a dainty button and buttonhole to fasten it around the wrist. The shirt waist collar is generally rather low and soft, being made cf the same material as the waist, for stiff collars are discarded, A dainty turnover is worn at the top f below this a natty soft craV

Close personal friends, of Gem Lew Waluce are authority fori statement that he designs writ an American novel, and that will begin the work just ms soon he completes his “Memoirs,” up which he is now engaged. Whetl the work is to be historical or I act ly .what lino he will pursue' " ; d that

A married man never realizes the responsibility he has on his hands until he has to walk the floor half the night with a crying baby.

“You must teach him from babyhood what the word ‘honor’ means. I never approved of monitors in scIiqoI. The system encourages spying and tale bearing. “ ‘Children, what are you trying to acquire that is worth more than all the money in the world?’ was the question I asked them. “ ‘Honor,’ was their prompt reply always.

NO RIGHT TO UQUNES*.

The woman .who is lovely Ip face, form and temper will always have friends, but one who would bo attractive must keep her health. If she is weak, sickly and all run down, she will be nervous and irritable. If she has constipation or kidney trouble, her impure blood will cause pimples, blotches, skin eruptions and a wretched complexion. Electric Bitters is the best medicine in the world to regulate stomach, liver and kidneys and to purify the blood. It gives strong nerves, bright eyes, smooth, velvety skin, rich complexion. It will make a goodlooking, charming woman of a 'un-down invalid. Only 50 cents r. F. M. Johnson's Drug Store.

“I would leave my schoolroom without anyone in charge, and on returning they would look at me trustingly, their dear, bright eyes saying ‘We were good.’ Always I put them on their honor. If the children bad the fact impressed on them at home that they mast be honorable and upright the world would be different. Half the women in the world do not understand what motherhood means, and so the influence with their children falls short of its possibilities. The mother’s influence with the child is paramount. She has the molding of his character, and can, in many cases overcome inherited tendencies. “Next to the mother's is the influence of the good teacher. I have never had any trouble with the ‘bad boy’ of the neighborhood or school. If an unruly boy entered my school and his mother came to me, saying that he was a very bad boy, at the same time telling me how to punish him, I would think she was a bad woman to toll on her son. Then I would set about taming him in my own way. “I always begin by giving him Something to do for me personally; made him fed that ho was necessary to my happiness and comfort.

tied in a bow in front. The shirtwaist themselves i\ full fronts made feminine and fan with tucks, insertion ard stitching' running up find down the waist. The full front is long and has a slight pouch suggestion.

The sleeves are rather full, especially below the elbow, where they puff out into bishop sleeves. Thin white lawns and lines are the favorites, but strawberry, blued

Doc /

Before 'J uly 1 there will be a poll of the legal voters taken in every county in the state. The work is to be done under the supervision of the various township trustees, and the poll taken will be the guide to the next legislature in apportioning the state for senators and representatives. When the constitution of Indiana was adopted in 1851 it. specified that commencing with 1852 a poll of the male inhabitants over twenty-one years old should be taken every six years. Then by the next following legislature the state should be apportioned into fifty senatorial and one hundred representative districts. The apportionment for congressmen is based on the population and the United States census forms, the guide. - /

That was the first step. Always I made him one of my best friends. As for the uaiuby-pam.by boys,

“SALZER’S

WILL WAKE YOU RICH* 3 P This is a daring statement. b\it Sal- || zcj-’b pcadfrbear it ouO ©very time- p Combination Corn. , . fc Greatestsornaaearth. Wlllpositfrely 1

gr^vtUig. Sw JSIIlTon jloliar G5 r aae> Greatest marvel of the ass; AN 12 tons of hay per acre. Fi rst crop tlx weeks alter sowing i

\ Cita! ofrne tolls. £' ' FOS ftc. STAMPS - ard this NOTICE m mail Llg etrt-J cr.telo/, lu Grain . Samples also 1 Soelu (KObu. per A.) Oats,(J

Bar!cy,(173 l>a.ptr A) 1’er.oat, eU-.Worth$!0. logaasurt. H -John A. SalzerSood ffo. USrcsss, Vfls.