The Lexington Leader. (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 29, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 17, 1891 Page: 3 of 4
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WHEN 8TAR9 SHINE.
Look! Daylight's faintest glimmer
P 1m out of sen and sky.
The serried clilTs wax grimmer.
Than into darkness fly.
And all tba aea'a white shimmer
Ha* dimmer grown and dimmer,
And darkemvl far and nigh,
ONE? RNJOY8
Both the method and resulta when
Bjrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant
and relr shing to the taste, and acta
jently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and liowels, cleanse* the sys-
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
"thes and fevers and cures ha! itual
constipation. Syrup of Figr .j the
cnly remedy of its kind eier pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in iti
effects, prepared only from the mosl
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com-
mend it to all and have nuada i
the most popular remedy knows.
r-Trup of Figs is for tale ia 50c
anH $1 bottles by al) leading drug-
gets. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on band will pro-
euro it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. I)o not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA Fit SYRUP CO
"German
;Syrup"
But yonder, yonder, yonder,
Blooms forth eneh goldeu star;
Flocking thf night asunder,
God lights them thick nnd far.
While all the heaveua wonder,
And all the beings under,
Becnuad audi glorias are!
Ah! when joy's sue is going
And darkness downward rolls;
When sorrow, blacker growing,
The lives of men controls,
Then in liod's heaven glowing.
Their tender fierceness showing.
Bloom out his star-like souls!
—-Chicago Herald.
But father, glancing at tlio Hatting THEIR NATIONAL HYMN.
aun. ad foaling that his pipe was out.
THE FRENCH "MARSEILLAISE"
AND IT9 TRIUMPH.
RODE ON A HANDCAR.
Mnrjr Andei-ftna'tf Kirltlne KIRirt tr
A FROG MAINSPRING.
the Hymn Which Inspire! the Revolt*
tionU 4 «f 179J, Now the Nation-
al Anthem—The «.«rmuu
••Wacht am Hhrliu."
Paris was the scene or great excite-
'Comt along bo; : it's time to lay
off. any way, an 1 1 don't feel easy
about tho gal " So -y' •>•* ho started
after Waif, and Tim with a mighty
yawn nnd stretch, followed slowly.
saying: -Might a quit this raornin'
or a month ago, fur that mattor, fur
all the good it's done us workin'
here."
All at once a mightv shout struck mont on Aug. 10, 171'-. Rows of the
fear to Tim's heart und ho ran with defeat of French troops, sent out U
great strides to where ho found his meet the armies of Herman defenders
father working like a madman, pulling of hereditary monarchy at tho frontier,
rocks and deb; off of what? Ah. had reached tho capital and tho fury
that little blue mi:i.bonnet lying so of the mob against royalty broke loosa
•till— was she i'im groaned and over the city like a terrible storm,
hid his face, whilo his luther at the Men and women goaded ou by fren-
i Bound e •-Hearten up. boy; she . aied agitators, gathered about the
| ain't dead but sac fainted like, arter Tuileries, tho royal palace, whose in-
i she told mo'bout the halt Lake ex matea sought safety In flight while
• ~ _ j press Hun. hoy. as von no or ran the faithful Swiss guards retarded tho
MARION S iLLliOW DOG. before, it-id t a up your rod shirt progress of the nob with the sacrifice
' while you're goin' to stop "otn ela« of their lives. Hut no human power
■ He's «eeh an onery-looking cur,1' U>« etirv.-ill lire trm k will hinder tb< •eo.ne.l to bo capable of oontrollinf
said Marion's f it her engineer from seein' it Kun!" the plebians of Paris on that fateful
I • lie's a plumb'disgrace to hev | An I otl .ped Tim. And when h«! «*!• soon a motley crowd disport-
•round." said Marion's brother. and tho enRi... >r came back there .at fV11,' ho
"I think he's beautiful, and I lore I father crying like a baby with Marlon P la™ «'' " >'"d ,u'Y°r bu0"
him" said Ma,Ion. with her arm j in hi- arms, who Kissing hi. . .7*1 ,1™"^
around tho yellow neck
Hungry Higgins—' Say, punlner, don't
yon wisbt you hud at', the Rold twi-utios
•« Kkrltlav Kfllirt In rin **• Arcra«o II.Tin U K ilned by tha yon could carryI" Weary Watkins—
uti Kni Bi>ui«nt. TV*y III* Huuf ;■ T eat ext. "Not if I had to carry theui vary far."—
Mary Anderson had to keep an en- You ofto i seo a horse hobbling ^dlwnapolia Journal
ga rment at the Carl I opera house, around on its toot- .ind with stiff front a western editor who had b« n oblJg-
now tho Hviiorion in Now II.,v on It lias always been a surprise t# «d to suspend hi« paper for a long
' ' ' ' lla\en, mu ih( Hu,iriiu, >lU.ioty did not PeriodIon a. •count of Illness, came: out
jays the Now York lelegram. She t , . ; theother day witM glaring headline*:
rid been i livin«r -i week's omrai/t moot L 1 case* saya a t >t|| -r«c*,i\ well! Dr. Bull's Cough
niui oi-tn pia\ inga weeK s engagement horsoshoer In tho bt. Louis Globe Syrup did it all!"
in the Kim city to great houses. The Democrat investigate them and pu® , ———: :—T" .. .
Vale student, a. w the cae.- ,.h the ,eo,,!e at Lull. The,o is onl, „ ! "
bought up entire rows of seats in the one way to shoo a 1 r «\ and tho met that's aU right. We'va had it in thostora
•largest house between New York and In the business would, of course, pre- for more than five years, and you can aee
Providence. 'er doing it thai way, properly.
•Our Mary told the mombors of the Croat many hor«e owners, howovor.im-
compuuy on Tuesday night," said tho affiae that thoy know all nbout it, and
chief tale-teller, "that there would bo Ul©y insist that tho .shoo be put on ao
rsal on Wednosday, as she in- as t0 lift tbo rear of the hoof up high
••>o no i-iany pftrnoua llini ing ahout^wlth
tended running down toth'o metropolis enou-h to prevent the frog from tuueh- ,c',lk'" "nrt rl"
for yourself it is as good aa new.—Indian-
apolis Journal.
"For evil newa rides fast, while good
waits" and Mils ia the reason you
atiatu. They
n not yet hoard that this wonderful
Ivatlon ul! kiiia pait .
A Hath minister rings door bell. Door
opens—a little nnd a voice says:
:1on't wnnt anything to-tiny.'
door closes -Bath Independent.
Tin 2'se of Opinm
ud the
' roup.),. checks, an i trying hard *''« building like a cycloB#, leaving
: cruel destruction in its wake.
some shopping It was just inbr the ground. We may argue the
after the s. non opened, and Miss An- case, but^ that is about all tho good it
dcrsou loft Now York without a nura- does- Wo havn to put the shoe on in
ber o? little Incidentals she needed. accordance with the ideas of the
"At '<:20 o'clock, just before the owner. Tho fact is that tho frog is
curtain was to be rung up, House- tho mainspring of tho animal.
Manager t'aril eamo rushing on the It is soft and elastic, and apparently ^ _ i(u
stage ith hair on end. My t.od, I more easily injured than tlio harder Adar-- Vi i Knlmsr"'^
am ruinfd! Miss Anderson's train ie substance of tho hoof, but for all that it rotary, Indiana Mineral Bprlnn*. InU.
wrecked at liridgeport:" the one part that should be utilized. y „„Vou.vo mlll„ „ {ool
• lie-raved a te .•grain and callcd If 11 wnstit lor use it wouldnt be 5(mt) ., Mr< vouagtiualmnd --Tbat will
for Mis- Anderson'a understudy. To | there. I.ift it from the ground nnd (l(J j,am|y f,„- y„n non. my dear You
tell the truth, she didn't have any. | you *'nd your animal walking on his ?an do ailly things to keep tlio hahyamus-
•Tliat settles it," laughed her father not to groan whilo Waif with ono eat
-Kpo
ckon?"
A Throat
and Lung
Specialty.
Tho. e who have not
used Boschee's Ger-
man Syrup for some
severe and chronic
trouble of the Throat
and Lungs can hard-
ly appreciate wliat a truly wonder-
ful medicine it is. The delicious
Sensations of healing, easing, clear-
ing, strength-gathering and recover-
ing are unknown joys. For Ger-
man Syrup we do not ask easy cases.
Jugar and water may smooth a
throat or stop a tickling—for a while,
this is as far as the ordinary cough
medicine goes. Boschee's German
Syrup i a discovery, a great Throat
&nd Lung Specialty. Where for
ears there have been sensitiveness,
>ain, coughing, spitting, liemorr-
age, voice failure, weakness, slip-
ping down hill, where doctors and
medicine and advice have been swal-
lowed and followed to the gulf of
despair, where there is the sickening
conviction that all is over and the
end is inevitable, there -we place
y>ennan Syrup. It cures. You are
R live man yet if you take it. fcs
Have You Tried lt?i
-IF1 NOT,
Go lo your Druggist, hand |
him one dollar, tell him you j
I want a bottle of . .
an he picked up his dinner bucket and
atari "4 off. "Marlon don't love every
houn' our that comes loatin' around, so
1 reckon he'll hev to stay."
■ rhauk you. father." said Marion.
"He'll bo company for mo. while you
and brother's in tho gulch. You'll
*ay he's worth his weight in gold somo
day."
"Woll, he's considerbul on the aarae
ahado now," said father finally, as he
sauntered off. followed by Tim, grum-
bling; but thou, Tim nearly always
grumbled.
Marion, left alone In the mountain
cabin, felt lonely and oompanionlesa
enough, so it was with a feeling of re-
llof that she putted her dog friend's
head, and felt that he was nlive at any
rate. Though Marion had grown to
love the mountains like human beings.
Into her speech had crept a little refine-
ment not apparent in Tim or her
father's. "I live with kings and
quoens, and if I did or tmid horrid
things they would crush me to death,"
she said ono day when Tim was teas-
ing her about putting on lady airs.
Whereat ho hud all uncomprehending.
looked at her in blunk amazement
Marion's mother, dying when she
was a tiny child, had loft her in the " ' * ay
oare of her father and Tim. who, if
they did not always understand tho
little maid's quaint speeches, wore
wonderfully proud of her nevertheless,
and were trying to dig a golden for-
tune for her out of the mountains.
Marion stood watching them out of
sight, and then lingered a moment as
a rosy flush crept over tho snowy
peaks and told her the sun was com-
ing up and the wonder of the day be-
ginning. The rosy peaks daz/llngly
contrasted with the sharp shadow of
their sides and clad them in the pur-
ple of kings.
•Oh, ain't it beautiful, thoughP"
■aid Marion, her hand stiil on tho yel-
low head of the stray dog; and he,
with wistful eyes intont on her face,
rapped his tail sympathetically on tlio
porch floor.
"Good-by," she said finally, before
ihe went inside. "You're so lovely,
I'd like to watch you longer, only my
dishes is to do. Come on. old follow.
you must havo your breakfast too,"'
she continued, turning to look at tho
dog so intoutly watching her every
motion. "I reckon we'll
Scavengers and ragpickers dressed
themselves in kingly robos, says the
up and one down, looked both unxioui
and delighted. "One of my lamb's,
lw in U uku ' said ti... old man llftlns «>" «« P'"'mlUd through
kjp km ! saloons and held mock oourt from
■ ■Tliiink Clod It ain't her tender little t'lr0I,# whlc!' had boon sacred to roy-
body,' ,-n d the engineer, with* glanc. f'f Men and women who lor
at the Altered rock. "Her leg'11 h d '«*> .« r...nnnnt.
mead and we've got a whole carload 'ron. the tables o the rich reveled in
Artlclm
of doctors goin' on a tower to Frisco,
who'll ba glad enough to help mend
the contents of tho royal pantries and
ine cellars. Debauch was the order
It" so saying ho walked hurriedly ot the day and royaly had to bo dl,-
away to get a doctor. polled of ita glory o furnish the trap-
Tim ... v.niching Waif, who wa; P'mfs'or tho feast, rhey were not
•or. tching in tho loo*, gravel an,' «?, "« . Ul,y 1 16
rocKH scattered about All at once li« "'^t o th® luxurious surroundings In
stopped and picked up something, and. : w.h'oh ,he"' fPPressors and the Mend,
rubbing it on his sleeve, handed it to «t tlienation s cnomleshad l.ved made
his father, saving: -What's this, d'ye them frantic with rag.■ and turned
A fngitiv® book-keeper froin Berlin was
arrested as lie landed from the steamer
j-a.-ilo. He win casiiy identified, an - he
aud ll.ouo murks on his person."—l'hila-
dolphia Ledger.
TIEV. n. r. CARSON. BcntUnd, D«k.. mv«:
.Two bottleH of HiiU'h i ut'irrh cure «.unj l'Moly
■urt'd my UtUo girl." Bold by Urugglata, 76c.
•'Dear John ' 'otno to morrow evening,
ra is laid np with a sore foot. Yonru.
Corn." "Dear Con - I can't come to-
morrow evening. I am laid np on account
of your pa's noro foot. Yours, «Tolm."—
Kansas City Times.
them into mad beasts, beut upon ruin
FITS. All I'ltaatojiiiod f
lorve liestor. r N.. i n .n
ellouscure*. Treatise nnd
■t...Id-hearing quartz, by guu.; an,: d. desolation. The worst dregs of
...w ' ' ° . .. ' l'nria mh'iii v m;iiii> 1 h« n niORt. mii'fnil
Paris eocioty made the almost sacred
precincts of tho Tuilrles resound with
a revelry whoso principal programme
was tho destruction of everything
beautiful and refined and tho degrada-
tion of the home of royalty to the
level of the lowest hovel where vice
and misery abound.
1 When tho shameless orgie was at its
height one of the young members of
, the mqb, a professional musician
i" whoso business it had been to enter-
°rd,r tain the audiences of low resorts with
That a watch may keep good time, ribald song and play, espied a beauti-
says Chambers' Journal, it should be fully decorated clavichord whoso tiny,
carefully treated; it should be wound i dolicato design suggested tho music of
at the same time daily, and when not the comic opera and the charming
worn should be placed in tho same dance tunos of the ago of the stately
position, a'ways hung up, or always minuet. Caught by an inspiration, he
laid down, as every watch goes differ- opened the instrument and standing
ently in dilTe; ont positions. before it hammered out the tune of tho
In watches.having a double case the ( ••Marseillaise," then a brand-new
niter ono should never bo left open, composition. Tho mob, drunk with
rich. too. "Whero'd you get it?"
"Waif scratched it up," said Tim.
•Wal, he's found ono mine, I
reckon?" said father.
And .Marion, from her father's shoul-
der said, triumphantly: "Didn't I toll
you he'd bo worth his wolght in gold,
father?""—Cincinnati Times-Star.
YOUR WATCH.
op it aim
If it is left open even for ono night the
glaBS is covered with a thin film
of duct, which will gradually enter the
works through even the tiniest open-
ing in tho ease.
Watches should be wound in the
morning, because a spring fully wound
up will more readily avercome the
disturbance produced by the move
monts of tho wearer. Springs will
frenzy and with the wine from royal
collars, joined the young singer in the
fiery,' tyranny-defying words of the
text Tho song of the revolution be-
came the death knell of royalty, and
its history became entwined with
memories too terrible to bo ever effaced
by time.
Tho "dawning of the day of glory"
whleh the •• Marseillaise" announces
to the children of Franco was tho
Wo had only just gone on tho road, | toes, (irndually his logs begin to
j and none of tho lad • - in tho company stiffen, and finally tho three bones in
could speak our Mary's lines. The his forelegs beoomo ono solid bone,
house had $1,500 or- 000 in it. It nnd there is no moro movement of
j was ft dandy, aud poor old Carll hud them than If the horse was walking
good reason to kick. on stilts. It is just about tho same as
"Carl! went before tho curtain, nnd, allowing a pair of hinges to remain
being a great favorite among the stu- out in the weather until they become
dents who were raising perfect Nod rusted solid, excopt that with tho
with th.-ir Kalis' for Mary, pacified hinges you can break tho rust off. oil
thom wiili an explanation. Hut a them up nnd work them. But with
little matter liko a train-wrook won't tho horse's leg you can never separate
kepy Mi*H Anderson from playing the bones again.
here tO>nigbtt' llid Manager Ctrll
••(iood! good!' eried the students. The emu-men oi the Ami).
i Then there were songs by tho student* Tho late Emperor William objected
that kept tho audience amused aud io to tho Banker lileichrooder, and it was
good humor. only by dint of tho pressure oxeroised
•Nino o'clock fame and still no upon his venerable majesty by liis-
Mary, but bets were freely wagered marck that Bleichroedor and his
that sh. would play that night 'Is daughter were very reluctantly invited
tho audience willing to wattP' asked to court b: lis. Unco iiis g.io ta, the
Mannu v Carll, as he appeared before old monarch determined thatthobank-
the curtain with a little speech again, er nnd Miss Blelchroeder thould be
A mighty -Yos!' went up. hospitably treated, and, finding that
••It wns five minutes of 10 o'clock the young lady lacked partners and
when Miss Anderson itppcared on the was loft to sit out all tho dances, ho
fO.age with her arms full of parcels. Five himself in person ordered ovory young
minutes later the play proceo d and a otlicer whom ho met in tho Jail-room
few minutes of midnight lim uudience to invito her to dance. Much to their
went home, after having witnessed nnnoyat'.co the gilded youths of the
one of the greatest performances Miss Guard wore forced to obey. They did
Anderson ever gave. She told mem- so after their own fashion, however,
hers of the company of her great race aud. marching up to the lndy one after
to New Haven after her train was another, they exclaimed in far from never return."—Indianapolis Journal,
wrecked just this side of Bridgeport- engaging or affable tones: "Most gra- A r. -
eighteen miles from tho City of Elms, cioue Fraulein, by the commands of
"No train could pass the wreck and his imperial and royal majesty 1 invite
Miss Anderson couldn't reach Now 11a- yon to dance with me." 'Tho poor
ven with horses till nearly midnight, girl's mortification may be moro easily
It was <'•.;"><> o'clock, and our Mary had imaglued than described.—Argonaut.
t nbout given up hopes when a
VI lint I* Virtue f
The emperor Sigisinund, in conver-
sation with Theodorle Archbishop of
Cologne, asked tho primate how bt
T
<*avftiGHT i ftl
A senm of fullnui
nnd other troublos after eating?
Then you nerd a "Pellet." Not
one of the ordinary, griping, tear-
ing pills—it's a sickness in itself to
tike them. But one of Dr. Pierce's
Pleasant Pellets—the original Liver
Pill, tho smallest and the easiest to
take. The easiest in the way they
work, too — they're mild and gentle,
but thorough and effective. Every
part of the system feels their health-
ful influence. They cleanse and
regulate the liver, stomach and bow-
els. Regulate, mind you. They
prevent disease as well an cure it.
They're purely vegetable and perfect-
ly harmless. Sick Headache, Bilions
Headache, Constipation, Indigestion,
and ail derangements of the liver,
stomach and oowelt are promptly
relieved and permanently cured.
They're the cheapest pill you can
buy, for they're guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or your money is re-
turned.
You pay only for the good you
get.
This is true only of Dr. Pierce's
mediciucs.
oimi
Jennie had never seen a man with such
a long blaek hoard tind such bushy hair as
her seafaring uncle had, but everyone
know what hIio mount >vben nho said that
her "uncle with the peek-a-boo face wai
here to-day."—Harper's Bazar.
2:<tat foi
1. Auk
Minnie, with novel, to Mainio at piano:
"Please play something pathetic dear. I
bavo just reached tbo chapter where the
heroine stands weeping on the shore as
tho hero nails away, perhaps to never,
It St . i biludeJitlim, ra.
The Best Medicine known |
for the CURE of
I Diseases of the Li«er, A,
All Diseases of (lie Stomach, ra
I Diseases of the Kidneys, |s|
All Diseases of the Bowels,
PURlFlliS THK BLOOD, JL
CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, Ffl
Restores Perfect Hedih,
«*8 !~;
GOLD MEDilL, PARIS, 187B.
W. BAKER * CO.'S
Breakfast Cocoa
front which the eiceaa of oil
not break bo easily if wutchea
carefully wound up and not taken out I downfall of that royalty which had
of a warm pocket and placed directly kindled love of glory to niako France
against a cold wall or on a marble j forgot tho misery to which royalty and
slab; for that reason a protective mat aristocracy had condemned her toil-
is desirable. ing millions.
Tho changes of the oil. tho vnria- All Europe became terrorized be-
t ions in temperature, the density and fore the use made of ro^al and eccios-
Waif, cause you nunc to m liko a waif i humidity of tho air, all greatly affect lutie heritage in the w unto and tl.a
I vu reading .bout In father', paper "« " ' ■ ""J*lc °[;'i arso,ll„,so. Never
the other nigh, After wo g.„ thin- l-vr watch of the most perfect before had n.us.o boon used a, a tveap.
rid up we'll o over to where f-iti i n finlsh lil,,t almoat neutralizes those ad- on against tho throne or against socu-
Tim's work,n\ I wan. v..u tl'"trn ! '"-','AO mttuencee. No watch keeps jar or ecclesiastic aristocracy. Music
th« WAV St. I enm m.nd viin Hinrn in i perfectly correct time. Even the best < had been one of the most loyal of all
case 1 need " chronometers, u-sed in observations j tho arts, and now it had become the
Vh tin'iM uont /vi Mh- i n f nn l W i i f and on board ships, must be regulated . Ally of the bloodthirsty revolution,
oreiit e.mif.it iiee mi n lim nnd according to tables that ilx tho varia- which did not rest •until it had steeped
or m a tti,„r .ii« i anA I tions to which watciies nro subject. ! the soul of Paris and of Franco in the
Ce AmbC ai. .t'S. A s"m,ld ,«■«>: 1" "d, of "Hetoerae,. of
us wiis h ird t i bear while fuller lwo or three years. In time tho oil i priests and even of its own devout
1 pulled at his pipe and said ill tie. a bad decomposes, gets .nixed with the par- ! followers.
sign for father who dearly loved to
talk.
bright idea struck her. A lot of track-
men and wreckers had come up from
Hridgoport on hundcars, a four-wheel
crank arrangement, used by the rail-
road repairers along the lint*.
" '1 will give $200 to the men who
will tako mo to New Haven on one of
those handcar- said Miss Anderson.
O. M. Shepanl, the pre-ont general su-
perintendent of the Now York, New
Haven & Hartford road, was at the
scene of tho wreck. He offered eight
of his biggest and most muscular men
to Miss Andoreon for her handcar.
Sho gayly mounted the little car with
her maid, it was a grout ride and a
dangerous one. Of course, though,
Mr. .Shepnrd wired ahead for a clear
track. New Haven was reached after
the great< -t h n ;ear racoon record.
The big. brawny Irishmen worked the
cranks liko majors, and they tfot tho
-00 too. Miss Anderson said it waf-
file :no9t oxeitintf ride she had ever
experienced in all her travels around
both hemispheres on all sorts of trains
and vehicles.1'
•IfMtuil, hI.mmU 1. niun
K^*OrnUa«! nk<.. 'icti A
Brown -"Old Cobwigger is remarkably
Kuppr«tition« for a mau of his intelligence.
] haw him pick up an old horsPHhoo tho
Merritt-
ought to act to obtain happin
cannot, sire, expect it in this world."
•'Which, then, is the way to happiness
hereafter?" ••You must act virtuous-
ly." "What do jou mean by that ex-
pression?" ' I moan," unsworn! Tlio-
odoric, "that you should always pur-
sue that plan of conduct which you
promiso to do whilst you arc laboring
under a lit of the fcout, indigestion, er
bile.
other day.'
it over that $:>.000 vat
Brown—"Did it bring
"Wo Merritt—"It f« ll dowi
•Yes. lie nailed
in his library."
him good luck?"
nnd hroko the
Harper's Bl
LMI MM
Pit tllH
iul.
p«ly t'r
Itbrtt
ii be
MORE WOMEN, LESS MEN.
One
j tides of dust that enter the works of i No wonder that with tho revolution
! even tho best-closing watch, begins to the "Marseillaise" also was put to
i"onc day Marlon and the devoted i <•' * n.at,.rial and wears | sleep It WU tabooed by all (fovern-
Waif started over wh re Ti-n and out tIi0 W0l'kin? ports. It frequently ment authority, and in Franoe it was
nf the curiosities disclosed bj
ensus statistics is the fact that,
Without a (oiiutl).
.lames 1*. Pork, of l'hlladolphiu.
SHiib to be a man without a country.
He li ves on a little triangular bit of
land that, through some oversight,
has not been included in .my of the
election divisions of the city, and of
oourso, therefore he bus no voting
statue. "The only parallel known in
this country, ' says the Phlludelpbia
Record, " was that of a wholo town-
ship io the state of Ohio, which was
entirely left out in an apporWonment
hi^ Through- of election districts-, nnd the citizen*
orl''- who claimed the right to vote hau no
redress whatever' and were unable to
exercise the right of suffrage until
lllt.'M, i u.l be ended It l'lkklv Ash
ii tor,'' "Curidtve," or almost anything
t*rs. It mi loubtedly would have nu-
ll all other preparation* ol similar
or Tlir inline lOltfin h mlslctdlnK;
-fly n inetllclue, uml cannot be uted
.♦•raKe,
Visitor "I called in reference to your
advertisement in to-day's paper, sir.''
Man of the House -"Yea. 1 have just in-
vented a balloon that is going to revolu-
tionize science, and I need an assistant"
Visitor- "Exactly, sir. What do you
want me to do?" Man of tho llouso—"I
want you to go up in it."—Harper's Baser.
NOT GBirE 30R KICK Eli.
RICK II HAD
At UK, imp
nemitlry
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS
ilH. They
al'ribrt 2?*fcl£
laddrr. Cone
?V«in<fhlii<ld*r. Conquer
1,ill..uk uervou* ilu-
on'«-r«. EitablUh nat-
«-omplexion
ml. 1 I UKt.V VH.KTAIILB.
e .loio li nircljr id|mMtoiultc
" Wllfc^Wlll
The Great Western Railway Terminus .
The Great Pacific Seaport Cily.
Real Estate Is the Basis of all WEALTH.
lather w«,-o working. The mountain j hnW«M a watch requires clean-
patl. was b'rdLM .'.l by purple . .ng o encr thim onee la twoyoara «-
„lden daMos ,nd MaVi.m, gathering PaculUJ' 1 It «1°bo8 badly or l exposed
her urms f.,11. sat ,1 .v... and inn.le .. to much dus and dirt
irreat roath ,.f .hem l-r \\ ..if', Any one that has the nnsfortuue to
where.ip u his sbeeplsh air of being ; f*°f h"i '„to ou.d lak.
agreeable i. am.M,, t.„.| ... «"aee to the watch-maker to hare
oear quite natural and easy in his U.tak,n P1®0" und d™n,cd' R del"j;
appec
i to seroani
of even an hour may spoil the watch
has bcci
ivod,
In absolutely pure and
It It soluble.
No Chemicals
nro unod la IU preparation. It
liaa it.ort than three timet the
ttrenfjth of Cocoa mixed with
Btarrh, Arrowroot or Rug^",
I and Is therefore far mora aco-
V nomlrat, catling It ti than c..e
| i; (J mi ta nip. Itl*delleIou«,iioar.
ishlng, RtrrnRthcning, kaiilt
dioiotkd, tnd admirably adapted for invalids
as well as f r pMSOQS |b health.
Sold by Grocers ererywhere.
W. BAKEF. & CO.. Dorchester, Mar,3.
magnificence,caused Mar
with laughter. forever
They bad left their usual path and TI|I> p|ri„r,.hqin. F.j-r
woro walking Hlon^' 011 t n .-uio of waiter .Scott usually saw with
Brown h canon. them u - the appreciative, searching eyes the scenes
railroad truck. 11 ■: down oxpiv*,-, had j jn nature which be described. They
passed and t.im engineer had wnved nre therefore accurate and picturesque,
his hand and ^mllcd nt th<.- pretty pie BOmetlmeB he relied upon his
ture of t uo 1. .ile maid with her arm-, j jmagrination rather than upon his eyes,
full of blos-oms und the long 1< an. | "\Iiss Mdgeworth, whilo a guest at
11 " Abbottsford, asked hlin to visit with
her the ruins of Melrose Abbey by-
night, at the same time quoting his
famous lines—
if thou would'st view fair Melrose aright,
Go visit it by the pale moonlight."
• Ves." answered Scott, "let us go
by all means, for I havo never seen it'
D U RHAM TOBACCO.
AND IS
"A WINNER WITH HORNS."
TRY IT.
yellow dog garlanded with the sum<
I blossoms, barking furiously at the
train winding below then.
It was only half an hour before the
up express for Salt/ Like was duo
Marion knew; und while ^ o ti too I
watching the down train disair ir an
ominous rattling sound over Iii head
sounded in her o >r . Looking up. to
her horror she found niie was in the
path of ti rock-slide. As quick a*
thought she Hew out of tho dangerous
way, but she was one instant too late
or else she stumbled nnd fell, she 1
could never tell which, but at any rate I
she found her legs pinned "nst by fall- I
lng rooks. She could move her arms i>eter Hell
and head a little, s'.ie found, and look-
ing down 011 the track she miw it was
covered with rock. "Oh, the train!
The train! What shall 1 do?" she
oiled. Then silo thought of Waif.
who had esonpod entirely, and who 1 hav ing eyes see not
was now crying and pawing around
hor. "Come hero. Waif." she called,
•onsidored too'dangerous a monster to
be permitted to be abroad. It wna
sung in Ih.'JO and again in 1848 on tho
barricades which revolution attempted
to build in Paris, but it was speedily
suppressed as soon as public order
was restored.
In July. 1870, the "Wacnt a in
Kheim," a song of Germau defiance
hurled against Gallic schemes to de-
spoil the German people of tho river
Ilhlne, nnd which had beon sung me-
chanically for thirty years without any
particular efTectT made all Germany
rise in arms atralnst Franco. Then
the people of tho latter needed a sim-
ilar incentive, particularly after the
defeat of the empire. Tho "Marseil-
laise" was brought out ug^ain: Its ter-
rible appeal to the sons of France to
• 'stoop the soil of their country in the
foreign invader's impure blood" was
sounded once more, but It had a pow-
erful adversary in the German
"Wacht am Kheim," which, aside
from the "Marseillaise." is tho only
Europoan national song not tainted
Ethel the
that's all
—Denver
ft/lgO.
••Johnny, sc« that yo
lion's sliaro of thill or
\ in Ethel Mam
11 me any." Johnny "Well,
glit I .ions don't eat oranges."
Il« l)> but Do
To help 11 at ure In tU
lie trammels >'f cIIm-i
ojflllmau- method of
uutliod Ik imfoi luiiul' i
'rom and lit-lp pun.
But the novelist hod an imagination whh d ,nastic loyalty. It guoo„mbea
which summoned before him any scene j for a time but ,t prove[i lts oW powor
he would describe. He had both the o( (.reali,lg tL.rror aurlu|f tho diiy9 0,
artist's and the poet s eye. V\ hat he communo. |'ho republic, after tho
had seen he handed over to his imagin- suppreission of tho commune, w isely
ation to work up, nnd that made it l00j{ ^j10 .•IMarsoillaiso*' Into its serv-
natural and picturesque. jco an(j made it tho ollloial French
Not a few men resemble Word worth s nationnl hymn-
• — Hell Since thon the "Marseillaise" has
"A primrose by a river's brim I made oonquest uft0l. (.on,lue5t. It was
A vellow urimrose was to bun, , ,. . . ,
And It wai nothing more." ^ ,l b"°auet where 0
,, . . * . cardinal presided and tbfe sone of the
A well-known artist, famous for his ... 1 . . .. ,, * . ,
. revolution recoived. indirectly at lea^
farm scenes, met one of this class who ... , ..
a recognition from the samo nomas
..ii i * is ui church which for nearly a century hau
I ho artist, in a sketching ramble, . " .
B aided In its suppression. It has be
recent
as a rule, and barring exceptional cir- l^ey appealed to tho courts,
cumstances, the male population is
fjtlling farther nnd further behind the
female. Thu- In the last llrltish cen-
sus, says the l'rovidence Journal, the
excess of women and girls over men
and boys in Great Britain was found
to bo about 900,000, or 200,000
more than ten years ago. The Ger-
man cotisus places the number
of females about tiOO.OOO above
that, of males in the Kingdom of Prus-
sia which is nearly three times tho
excess of twenty years ago. In the
whole German empire theroaro 1,000,-
(>00 more females than males. In
Sweden and Norway the "weaker" sex
la in the majority by 2.00,00(1, in Aus-
tria-Hungary by about 000,000, in
Denmark by 60,000, and in fact in
even Europoan country women and
girls outnumber men and boys. The
conspicuous exceptions elsewhere are
the I'nited States, Canada and Aus-
tralia in each of which the males tic ail"
are in the majority, though, com-
paratlvely speaking, not largely so. "Sambo, where di<l those chicken
These exceptions, however, are evi- feathers on your < -oat coiue fromi "I)un-
owing to Immigration, which bo. l.«t I i. i. .m -i" i..m« -dat
meatiy Dig^ah Sam Jobmmig I . ■-• traded
<*>ets wif am none too good ' Epoch
I S'VES i ll B
0/
0
nt of Hi
lit Of Ul «U III YlMtlllK ll
1. Oi. .. .ii. Iiiv.y pr<* eminently th« oom
niter of the l'uolflo NorUiwwt.
r Cllyln ih« I'nit od Stnt««M wnll
i renpert t.
r In Its pli
VSS'lnlr
Tlio lust b
' Id I'll 1 y v
tloli In
, loo olien(.'* / >
ill IlltO (Vlfloi.
Ins; Is undoubtedly
„f coercion „f iuh
foic.il. literally
' .,,11 ... this I* MC-
plim puiii. und sue
v. I. it li leaves tlio
statu Incompatible
rlIv and activity.
•t les fo
liun any other rltr .1 tint I iritort Btatea In f.i t
■ orj advaningo whlcl 'iiiui m tlio aol.d growtti
md pron|u■ 1 ity of a clt> la abundaoUy enjoyed
>y rortla.ut.
IHE TAWOOD REAL ESTATE CO.,
POBTLAHD. OBJBOOir,
lutbelioi-t elnn f<.r InvtM ^ yet<1e lnoi1 7< u
everreadifi. 11 t I .■ it. m.d almi'l- t la
1 aolutely I'-.tc, mid eanuot fall to bo pr .lltablo to
al>iii)rn:*l :
ilarial. Uiducy. rlibumt
ieedr.il but 1.1
■,i:otabrupt In
tend of weak-
tints. l7*o II
le and d)b;iep-
• (160 I
k la pot Iul.
n capital la b
natur:i
tio
briugri more men than
eu Had there been no irnmigra-
it is probable that each of these
countries would havo shown the Th Oily 0
5 excess of women which is found
y where else in tho civilized world.
1 although in the United StateB
whole, tho excess of males Is about
-.(•00 by estimate, in New Kng-
, whither tho tide of immigration
Kvi
rd-CM Vei
Find
lot 1.
t her
the Word!
Thfrels a 8 Inch display edvertlHe-
ment in this paper this week which ba-
ne two words alike except one word
The same ia true of each new one ap-
pearing each week, from the Dr. Hartc.
trongly In recent Medicine Co. This house places a "Orea-
.• is a l.irgo preponderance (.ent" on every thing they n.akfe* vi pub-
In less civilized countries, Look Tor it, send them the' name
where women are lightly 0f the word, and they will return you
THE TAWOOD REAL ESTATE CO.,
Portlnrrl ""in.
FOR HEN
'■ -J
come the hymn of social progress, bill
it has also remained the battle song ol
social revolution all ovor the civilized
' world.
Ago* of Tree*.
Some German scientists interested
DR. OWEN'S
ELECTRIC BELT
AIVT) BUSPI' rJSOHY.
Pnt'd Aug. 10, 1887. Imp'd dan. 13 1801.
•will ture all Tlbc maUa
10
nnd h e
uib.L.y, —
• .' *•40' neia, Kiiii-.ey Cicea*
5ENTS •. V; m,Trembling. Ccx*
m ual ExbauBtion,
Wattir.B of Bed7,
I ' D. -r icioirdlyin-
&'■. V; itisoreUoni in Youth. A;r
.. - rr filnfloLifo. AlaoEtECTRIC
- nELT':-r:blnfJ. S2i:0«<. P3S-
FRCE IllUSTRAIt'J 630K. -00
.; b« •
saw a cottage made picturesque by
and ho at onco trotted around where I leaving Nature to work her own sweet
he could look in her face, his own will. Brambles, wiltj roses, honey-
honest countenance expressing griof auckles, lichens and mosses covered
11 every hair. "Now. Waif, dear old j n,
fellow, don't fail me," she gasped, for Xhe artist asked permission of the
tho pain in her pinioned legs was al- owner, who was lounging at the door,
ooM mora than be oonld benr. "(lo . ,0 paint it. Irtng hi. consent, he (n (oreitrTimve recently iiirnuTiedTn-
bring father n Tim her. . Md bo quick, j taid h. wuul.1 return early next morn- formation in rajjard to the ageo ol
Wall, be quick. lng. and be^'lii his task. trees. They assisn to the pine tree
\\ aif wa- 0.1 almost before she ha.I He was tl.cr.va Utile alter sunrise. soo ^ 700 years as the maximum,
llniahed. and she could only pray to be met by tbo owner with a smirk 425 years to the silver fir 376 years
that they might bo in time. They ing smilo of self congratulation. lo the ittrch 246 year
were only a little distnnoe from thore^
she knew, but would thoy understand?
A panting yellow dog with a dilapi-
dated daisy chain around his neck,
flew straight for Tim nnd father, who,
when they saw him coming, looked up
beyond him for tho little bl. osun-bou
years to the red
•I vo been up since daybreak get- beech, 210 to the aspen, 200 to the
ting tho cottage ready for you, he birch, 170 to tho ash. and 14"j to the
alder and 180 to tho elm. The heart
The painter was disgusted its he 0f the oak begins to rot at about the
looked upon tho cottage, transformed n,r0 0j ;joO years. The holly 0:1k
from its picturesqueness into a neal alone escapes this law, it is saiii. and
. and carefully trimmed house. Every there is in existence 11 r AschalTen.
iv? .lK"'V, y ''' , loose branch had been out away, and ln r.ermanv, a tree ol this kind
When the. failed to seo l.er thoy nle wild rose, and honoys.lcklos all whll.h has „URined the age ol ii.)
naturally supposed that she was hid- ruthlessly lopped. yoal.s
d it is quite otherwise. In
here ar D, 000,000 more men
omen, and in China, too, the
i rgely preponderate. So we
n tudo that as a rule tho higher
lion is the more favorable to . . .
• rise of tho female sex. but wo !• 1 '
,1 iiinir to a
•ll question whether this result ^jHfn|sot<
nlcsome ono. An excess of , |,j„
in a country must have an un.
infln nee on the marriage rate
if course, on the birth rate; and,
it may lead to moral conse-
of a grave nature. Yet it
. tnr..i for women to multiply
han men; and the means that
n to produce a contrary result
s iviliz.'d countries are such
itlon could not countenance.
Book, Beautiful Lithographs or Sample*
Photo
Tribune.
The a
lor 'Raise the chin a little,
•tint "Am 1 all right other-
's." "Junt waut the chin a
" "Ves. That's all." Any-
in miniate you. |Tfikus out
1, .-loses his moduli nnd his
up to his nose | -Chicago
ry <lo| hi
L'OOK i'* i-: M' 1! I'I V
Where All gvnulna Roo.lt bear"Creicenl."
hend 2-ccnt lUinp. You get 33 p«gc book mth iwnpls
DR. HARTEH MEDICINE CO.. St. Loull, Ma
jms Ksier
Of Raxbuiy, Mass., says
Kennedy's Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep
Seated Ulcers of 40 years
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every disease of the skin, ex-
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price $1.5©. Sold by every
Druggist in the U. S. and
Canada.
BehB u- s- STANDARD
ifS^OAHP
Tho Bost in tho World.
KO VV KI<«UTS. I BIHIPrjB.
Ni Mil' u r:pus. hbrVH v Tic.
TAlcr. M I 'U.A MS PjERFKCr.
Used by the U. 8. Government.
ExrKui s a> yTHE SCALE Of THE AGE
and in fmt taking the p < e of th« old aly'e ol
iii F • i ■ • in II nn.l -t .. , . n ytr thert ll
n •"« b't'i. (-.••'I..- .« iiv .fmi I. - ng • co
01 in uk. Write for circular*, mlilmontal®, 41c.
H. N. Strait Mfe. Oo. KtMUClTY.Kl.
LADIES
Only!
money refunded. By mail J-'. Securely i
ed from observation. < OOK HKMEDY CO
Omaha, Neb.
« FAT FOLKS REDUCED
Alice. M^^, Or«fon. Mo.^frrit^
( i "M > wfiwht m
of 125lt.K." I . r
r\
M rod— T
l)r. o W.F.SNfDEH.
i'leabe mo .tloo
e«ire. Chicago, III
paper.
CURkU TO 8TAV CUHED,
We ' ruuaeaadad<
dre 1 cici v t .:h«
M w.drea,
HAY FEVER
& ASTHMA
Patents! Pensions
vull III. entoi id# or Ho w to Obtain * 1'# t n'
H, „ I i ..r | | >s|ON und mil'N I V l.fiW*
PATRICK 0 FARRELL, WASUKQTOW. D- 0
tr\- r.e .1. It A KI. II" <. '.'oi " • •' I II r4 Snert
KANHAHCirV, MO, ' ' ll'tt'd catalogM.
lOOK FREE!
J On apncial. Norvou*. I ri aU
QENSION S
Sticcr^gf^lj^Pro^egi^tet.
K : yralnlMt war. Uadjudlfaliugclal
T IIEI.IE1
PILES^
KItKK. AddressJ. 11. HEliV
RUPTURE
nit i:, tioz8.sumhvilla,N.v
((idder's pastilles.
Jlslhma
VANTED ■ 1
I' ii':;", " «iBruTi'to'.lTl, 15a*,«!l!
I the mit i
hlng* pretty
h und liberal i
THE PEOPLE'S REWEOY PRICE 2SG
UPium
Thompson's Eye S!a;
WN U—WiufieldKs VoU. No 42
/Iv's Cream Balm
)<* "
Woman or Child
jp;.,,
V.
Patar^
ing somewhere, nnd nt first paid no
attention to the frantic brute leaping 1-von ine Tost,
and barking around them: for.®alas!
he was a dog much given to demon-
trat ion when nothing: at all was the
He did not paint that cottage.—Sat
< hit for Wliooptntf Cough.
Dr. W. Robertson says that after
some years' experience of the use of
„ . , . , Father-Yoanir man. yo.. may have VhoopTng co„gh'"he
matter. But father, who was resting my daughter. « A ,. ..
nn 1 smoking, at length regarded Waif
with attention.
"Look here, Tim, 1 believe there's
sum rant gone wrong with the gal.
Look . t the brute, he's tryin' to tell
can
. safely say It effects better results than
Young roan <j°you8ly)-I assure all tho other remedle. rosognked a*
you Mr. Da.1.1 l ...l will do my best u,efu,. J„ lb. adult and ohUd It 1. of
to support your daughter in the style
she has beon accustomed to.
Vat
1 (inn
us,' he said. ' Ihe fool dog's alius up port her an\ l inger. She has beg-
equal benoftt He has administered
. benzole in whooping cough, where
'P ng)-— (.ant tup- convulsions and other complications
to his monkey-shine; you don't •; t
otT ou no wild goose chase, gal"
shouted Tim
give up."
gared me and
Young man (h
so you might's well But I am not prepared to do so y«k
Good-bv, sir. Yankee Blade.
were fust reducing all chances of re-
,v coverv', with pcrfoct success in a few n
•dor dampened)- dfty, ,a„n3, where pertua.l. w- vary
•umes ofti i - riou« aspegts, beasele | are
Vinous the Hiihhlali.
.',000 in greenbacks has beon
lidden among u lot of rubbish
Irunk of nn eccentric widow,
■nt. her summers in a cottage
onlngton, Conn., and who died
Always on leaving Stoning-
i he ' . of the season slio left
ink with a friend, telling him
contain; nothing of account,
didn't care to have burglars
ing through it, which would
<i*o if she were to allow it to
11 her cottage.
«.i.<nt Cttterplllnr*
•i i: rs f om ten to twelvt
ti „• mi to bo not uncom-
* . c species which
from six to eight inchec
On tbls ini
Hint "ti.la pi
t lP'.llBK tll't Iul
ord to >-told our
IrrrUh'Uinaor r
11" 'iKbt III Olll
A met lea. 'l r«
I .lit will till I (I.
it Kfdoral offl. I;
City Women
instead of Sc
know the nt
it's of far more
whose work 's
Beware
Millions of them use I'yle's Pearl-
ine for easy washing and cleaning
It's natural they should be the first to
ideas. If Pear line is good for them,
,llue Country Women
hard.
Peddlers and some v
/ill tell you, this
IT'S FALSE—
thmgin j.lacc i i'
, 1 'earline is never peddled, and if your gr.icer sends you some.
. e honest thing—stnd it t*ck. 808 JAMES 1'YLE, New Yor|§,
support of t>"
pollo.v mm i in
-s'.) Inhibit
li ^
I Recommended by I hvsiciitnB
' .lis. Plwuumt and ngrecuble t< tho
it without objection. By druicEMs.
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The Lexington Leader. (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 29, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 17, 1891, newspaper, October 17, 1891; Lexington, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc110053/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.