{ title: 'The Northern tribune. (Gouverneur, N.Y.) 1895-1929, October 04, 1895, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-10-04/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-10-04/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-10-04/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070443/1895-10-04/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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» r.Y :*'-3S -•* nroL/ix. It #: ABUSMU) is**. *•*> wrrABLijM*i> lets. GOUVEKNTEUR, >\ Y., FRIDAY, OCTOBKK 4, 1895. VOaYTsfatsUI TEJBrMi ABUJBJU X 17. NO. 38. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. SANK*. A. UWood Pre*,: UK OF GOUYEEHEUB, RlCHVttLE. «OUYCBKXU&. H. Y. Dwaa* raw LAVS Stan or Xsw TOOL OF LPITAL. JEPLUS. 1895 $100,000 .$87,000 oxaaoroas: Wimaai R. Dodge, Uewton iAdrich. SOT Bauds. Charles H. Anthony. Ssaef every ttssuUiUos *f w \*~ BtfZSSfa. ece^poett promptly aadlad\rrid*ala..&*eh ~ careful at uuTleoi Prestasn OENTI8T8 LLTODIRAlACBOflOP&OLDr weald afcsty replace that broke* topta, Cental work la all ttsbimpchs*. _^ _*w In •hoatamm Crown*. Prices rsach of mt\ Satlafaotftoa gaaraataad. DR. CIO. ». BAJtNtS a* over Beak of -R. CHAB. H. BOeABT <% _ extracted painlessly. \ Crown aps* LAWYERS. IMS*** T. *?»» Oct 3 -Dr. and Mr*. G. B. Barnes, of Crooverueur, were In tow© Wednes day, the guest* of O. D. Barn am. Cba* O. Gardner, of Watertowo, made a business trip to Riehvilie this week, being interested in the settle- ment of tbe >\ O Gardner estate. Dr. and Mrs. F. D. Allen joined the great New York excursion Tuesday md will spend some time visiting friends in tbe metropolis. Tbe Cross Circle will bold tbeir next social at tbe hospitable farm home Of Deacon James Stereos near the Hart- ley school boose, on Thursday after- noon and evening, Oct. 10th. Team* will be provided for ail who may wish I to attend, and we are sare of a warm welcome. Wallace B. Thayer, in whom as a Richvillian we have a deep interest, reports his enterprise at Gouvernenr, (the School of Stenographv) a success beyond bis anticipations. He is pleas- jantly located in Masonic Temple block and aJ ways has a warm greeting for his Richvi lie friends. James Brodie, \the pioneer\ cloth- jing merchant of Gouvernenr, is in town to day on business. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. H. Johnson re- turned from a week's visit to Mrs. X*s former borne at Harrisvill*. A number of oar 6 A. R. veterans and members of the Relief corps were In attendance at the meeting of G. A. Rich Post held at Dekalb last Tues- day. Tbe Relief corps proves already a powerful auxiliary in renewing the interest and enthusiasm of tbe \old vets \ Tbe next meeting will be held at Riehrilie on Tuesday, Nov. ft. - Tbe harvest dinner given by tbe Baptist society last Tuesday was a success both in a social and financial way. The gathering together of the members of tbe society and tbeir friends served to cement tbe ties of Christian brotherhood. All war*. unanimous in pronouncing tbe dinner whieh was served complete in all its appointment*, and to this no one can testify with better grace than CATO. * e> • t FINE/ • SPRAGUCVfLLE. 3 — siiss Huttoo. of Emeryville, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Henry attOBRAORTn. at Lew, Y. ©.ft. . BereJsV? seta block, .K.Y. a JOBOTON, •—._,- _- at Law. Omesever tbe first eo**er***r, N. Y. ho* paid to eolssetSons sad real PHYSICIANS. R. B» F. *YF. F. DRURY. r ^ OSRee at B ltt»Sp,m Oct Is tbe Huttou Mrs L. Wight, of WiMXKwto, wat the recent gueat of Mr and Mrs, J E Jennie. ^Irs, 8. W. Foster returned from a visit to Herkimer friend* last week Ladles Aid society of M E. church will meet Wednesday a m , IK-t w The Baptist ladies will *e rv © their dinner Thursday, Oct. 17. J. E. Jennie has broken ground for a new boose on Factory street Mrs. Frank Howe and children, and Mrs. Luther Chapln, oi Antwerp', will visit friends here the coming two weeks. Messers. 8. W. Foster and D. W. J Sprague and ladies were very pleasant ly entertained at the home oi Mr*. Wm. Malterner, Wedneeday. We are sorry to chronicle the remov al of Mr. and Mrs. Chat. McHeme trom our midst; they have decided to make Dekalb their future place of residence Our school is progressing very nice- ly under the supervision of Misses Battle Marshall and Ina Crabb. Miss Matis Teebles is a greet sufferer from infUtnatory rheumatism. Mrs. Amelia Merriman is visiting her j*arent« Mr. and Mr*. Ward Brown of Haileeboro. Mies Emily Livingston expects her first invoice of fall millinery thi» week Rev. T. H McCleDtbeoand wife are tarrying with friends in the south- ern part of the *tate. The frisky breezes of Saturday ni?ht blew down * tree in the yard of Mrs. A. Merriman and also one on the premises of Tho«. TurnbulL Tbe GoQverneur boys struck fipragueville in good style Saturday. Tbeir yells were furious bat hearty. But ala* as they wended their way homeward in the gathering twittght, tbeir faint sad voices were hushed, and silent a* they quietly munched crackers and cheese. Cheer up boys and come again. Success may once again attend your effort*. SCOTCH SETTLEMENT. left yes to 5ew Oct 2 —Freeman Beerman terday morning for a trip York. Mis* Lillian Noble has returned from a week's visit with friends at Heuvel ton. Miss Eva Thomas, of Richville, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Lester Beer- man. Miss Maggie Allan and Eva Fox are giving tbe best satisfaction as teacher's in oar schools. Alvln Frawley and Arthur Wilson visited friends on Battle Hill last week. A STATELY OLD MANSION. 7 tot p. an. SURVEYORS. Pekoe. Forty yean drarast; and Notary B land S?i to hinT ww'le B a*reBded to .». Y saums ^6ct. l.—J. P. Griffin was in Goover- neor Wednesday. Oliver A. Keer has built a sidewalk in front of bis house on Mafn street. There was a ball game here Sat or day between tbe Fine and Fullerville teams. Score 22 to 21 in favor of Fine. Rev. Mr. H. C. Munson delivered a temperance address in the M. £. church Thursday evening. The experience social for tbe benefit of tbe Episcopal church Saturday evening was a great success. Sixty dollars were netted. The ladies Aid society of the M. E. church held a New England supper in tbe town hall Saturday evening. Re- ceipts $22. The last meeting of the Ladies Working Guild was held with Mrs. Geo, W. Hatch. j Those from our village who attended tails like great mam Turbine- capacity L CUTTTJIG, GottYertreur, or D.rimQJJS,w«1a|ftit 1 the New York excursion are Wm Welch and family, James Cleary, Kate Griffiin, ElU Sullivan. Mrs. T. F. Coo boy and Geo. Cardiff and his son George. C. C. Cunningham,, of Gouverneur, was in town last week in McI<eod's gallery taking photos. A. A. Kilbourn has his block nearly done on Main street. } Levi O. Jones and Miss ADD*. Willis j were united in marriage Monday after j noon by Mr. Warren. The Fine cornet band gave one of tbeir plea*ant open air concerts Moo day evening. C. R. Fairbanks, of Heuvel ton, was in town Monday. Thomas F. Con boy has greatly Im- proved his property on Main street by filling op tbe open sewer and other- wise grading tbe approach to tbe street. Great quantities of apples are in tbe market here. ANTWERP. ^of Sarah Ora* Jewott, ta* HOT- •Mst, at Berwick, Ma.. I wessder if there is another such house in New England as the home d Sarah Orne Jewett, says a writer in the Boston Herald. I have Fe*>n many stately man- sions that go back to the days before the Revolution — one in particular where General Gage was quartered in old Dan- vers, a town which IM linked by witch threads to Berwick, and one with gam- brel roof upon which a good dame and hex cronies climbed to he out of reach of husbandly authority while they drank tea forbidden to patriots on til the tax was removed—but I have never seen a living place at once so modern and so reminiscent of 1780 or days younger still. In it> great rooms filled with old mahogany and warmed by huge tiled t firepiact* it weald be easy to forget that the gundalcwF, with their high peaked | birds' wings, do not yet j MONKS AS FARMERS. Tb* TrappwU fisie to Mm th«- Mo»t sue- ci**»fol TiUrr* of %hm &*4I In (uaaJA. V nduubc«xiiy tbt* jnuwt sudfKrful farm en» In lamMht nrv the TrappUt iwuiik*. A\ Trm-ailir. iu ()M* nant, al Uka in QirUr, and al St NorU-rt, un tbe K^l r.w,r. in thr wwt, thoy ha\tr chang^Hl 1-rprojnL^iug tracts «>f land into fertile farm-. To UM? Uut->t of thflr aettlrjiiruts—that at St NorU*rt—I paid a vialt rti-n-ntly ilur lng a brief bitikUy trLp out v^.^t Tl»u gTvat farm is an ohj«<ct Icemiii tiL»< w<>uld >huw to the dulWt capacity wLwit fn-rw vrraucv and iudu*try oan do with r;v>t rt»- Ki\iir« *if untlll«d or Mt*nikUlkMl kiaxxt land* oui iher*. Thrw? yran aguu 1 li<&ro«<d. a littIt* iNtiupany of Trapp^t Hr^rtheri* IMHIM? uut to Cauada froui Franc* and built a ni«»Ma»t«*ry on a farm of l.ftoo IUTI* that had b^Aii pivariifed to UM*UI by a j»ru*t»t naji»»xl Fat!u*r Hluho*, WIH> had uxkvii a lwaJ.UK part in tbt» t-ffiiftii tha4 have frr ywim Ufti V.VMHV to «t<ule our gr«nt w»*?.t lzumnliatfly u|<»n \hvlt arrival ilu y i**t u» wurk ou the gn>uml. They clear*tS it of iu ecrutt, laiti out n garden and bctfw!) what I* called ' hrvnku.K What piM^n-^i ha« bt*?n made i*intv tlien may bv jud*^<d frotu the fact that thi» your tht»y vnH twirvwrt ls f 0uo bu»heN of grain. And tbrir gardtm U a fcight worth ^«^ring. with the iuar\'el- ou» Aljundiviuv and varU«ry of * rgetahlea, enough, api«.renttr, to aupfjon a irood siz4<d ti»wn. y^r canhs and forbuTM* they have put up *tAbl«« of the movf ^pprovad luvnlfru type. They have a crminvry, a hennery v\ ith hondrtxl* cif fowU. a piggery of what is Kiid vo U* the **prup<er kind,\ and ihey an- building a larp granarr. The father tuperuir. who Ifl a »<JK'h gvB~ tletnan i»f di^tirguUh«d family, wa* work- ing in the garden. He saluted u* politely, and told u* to make ouraeJvea at borne. We were afterward told that 3*e U the humblest and the hardest working of all the brethren. It U well known that the ruk* of the ordtiT of La Trappe are of tli# strictest kind. They are, however, somewhat modi- fied in CADr-la Here the daily Hfe of a clerical mem our of the order la regulated at follow*,: Six houra, from »3Up. in. to 2:80 am., for sleep; six bourn fur devo- tions; kix ho'-rs for manual labor, and six hours for tbe reading room and for private work. The lay member of the order gives from eight to ten hours t o manual labor. No Trap put, clerical or lay, k permitted to eat ftVh or fieah food. All are ftrict vege- tarian*. Yet they all anpesred to be phys- ically fftrung, clear eyed and clean limbed. There are IS members i n the at presents* French and t The work of the whole establishment Is done with military prectason* without the slightest appearance of stiffness or re- straint. There Is implicit obedience, but, as it is based on religion, H has all the ap- pearance of freedom. Thear sleep on plank beds in narrow cells and never speak t o visitors, nor, for that matter, t o each oth- er. The father superior and the guest master do what talking these Is fro be done. Tbeir con vernation Is ensjjned to a saluta- tion, which they exclaim when passing each other, and whica.Js **Mon frere, U fautmonrirP (\Broth* we tecs* die!' r ) When a brother dies, he la buried In the order's graveyard and, a rude piece of wood bearing his Christian name merely Is placed at the head of the grave. The TrapplKt Is truly the man who, the world forgetting, U \by the world forgo*.\— Montreal Letter in Providence Journal. H. Wood is entertaining KUa Wiser, of sail down tbe liver from the landing wharvef in fieet£ of tens and twenties to Portsmouth, with their loads of pine planks and boards to be exchanged for East Indian nun, tobacco and molasses or for Russian iron, duck or cordage, or for euch priceless old glass and silver and china as came from unknown ports •nd now peep out wrjodcringly upon nineteenth century cushions and pic- tures and bric-a-brac, from tbeir deep- set clipboards and shelve* . . . \1 found these things here,\ Kim Jewett says, \and I hope t o leave them when I go into the smknown.\ If one had one's ohoice of aaceetars, it would be impossible to pick out better than those who chose the elaborate cornice*, all carved by hand with infinite pain*, and the high paneling of tbe parlors, and the broad window sills, and the flowered wall paper, still bright and fresh, though of a pattern on which Ma- rie Antoinette might have set the seal of her approval when she fitted up the htUe Trianon. . Ai Artist la Was la Tirana, The Paris Debats relates an amusing story from Vienna. M. Weigl of that ck.*. Is a man of original mind and has long conceived that tbe vacuous gas* and alien smile of tbe wax figures u*cd in fashion shops might he changed into putnethinir higher and nobler. The said fUruree are henceforth to poseeas a high ediRauhmrJ value. Inspired 1 with this idea, he aban- doned the \veteras eerae,\ fir ancient waxes of a primitive time, and copied the features of Mme. Ilka Palmaz and other leading artists. For si. Weigl U himself an artist in wax. This new form of real- ism took greatly and tbe shops of nou veautes were the center of' admiring throngs. But other celebrities began to appear in other shop* The fash fa en mart of Vienna was fast becoteing a museum j of famous me* and wornm. J*L Weigl found that his great Me* was being adopt- ed by * disloyal eoaspetHor, and he has therefore caused this offender t o appear he- fore the tribunal, t o pay a heavy fine and promise to destroy the plagiarised busts. It Is * pity that this Invention was not In- troduced Into England before general elec- tion. JL portrait model of oat successful member in gala areas would have been a great hit, and the defeated rival, dad In crape, would have made a valuable figure for tbe funeral w^arebouse^Pall Mall Gfc- H» man who models the nomologicaJ specimens for the agricultural department Is even more interesting than the division. fie is Mr J. W. Heodiey, a Dative of Vir- ginia, an over the workl travaler, a many skied, all round genloa He has bean first violin In * San Francisco thaaf, he has been inventor o£ an instrument for gtvtng hearing to the deaf, he has been a self portrait painter and a skillful of of the most atstlke aguree now tn X*rtona) museum. At u usual he to frutt of GENERAL MA. O \ b. b Va# > i-<«*n*t<>r I»»ir*K * roui m *: r»»*« of I'*»r»: » %j«s \or ; —r.i Senator Ma ;;.t » i**t «tl a »r rok»- ut pa- * m .nt I'bamberhu » how-1. , l>r* NNale» and Maker. •n»;i trttion and thrnk h^ \ »-ry wry dout^fui • >f theel M-nator b»\ r Seen Uliillrf h-.nt ,,f \ - m :: raiv«;% rtt hi* r< H;» pi-V- ••\:u i* h&\ t' \n-vii lLi i« ch^nvei f r\vi» Tbe re..iti \ e* kU!uii»»>n«>i *ldc if tin- HONK VnlK hrVMNo. LIEUTENANT PEARY S TRIP WAS A FA LAST ARCTIC LURE. • »4 Aa~ ' -y tclrcrnuh The etiti the right .%riu and leg. lie u un.iMr to sti«ak. exeept a few inarlieuiate ^ UIJUV He hat m^intaiuid coosehiu!*ne».<s how ever, and seek* a* btwt he ran to a** *»: thtiae who an minutiTing to his wmfori Tbe exact time General M.\ruaH- W»M St re ken is in douhi, }iv rettreA.1 at li o'chvk Sunday night, nnd up to that time was in g\*id health and fpirita and had given no lutima tlouof feeling un well. No sound was beaxd from his riK>iii after he retired. At 10 o'clock VI on dar morning Mr. l^ong, manager of the hotel, went to the general's room t<i call him. He found that he IU HKVATOR MAHOVK. had Ijcen vomit- ing and was unable to ^peak This last feature WM attributed to exhaustion inci- dent to the vomiting, and for a time no significance wa* attached to tbe general's .failure to talk. Dr. Wale* es- surgeon general of the navy and a long time friend yit General Mahone, was sent for, but could not be found. In the meantime it became evi- dent that the general's Illness was serious, and l>r. Baker was called In. He at one* pronounced it a case of paralysis. Dr. Wales arrived shortly afterward, and with Dr. Maker took charge of the rrabafet* S»tet4*> CAMBRIDGE, Maes., Oct. a.—KMott F. Rogers of Chicago, formerly of Worcester, an instructor in ahemistry at Harvard. was found dead In one of the laboratories in Boylston hall. The case Is somewhat mysterious, though all the indications point to suicide. Rogers at times suffered from mental aberration, and of late he has been unable to prepare his lectures and do his work in chemistry properly. ABttctpated a IMvarea Cart. TCCKKRTOK, N. J., Oct. S.—William Hall Slack of Washington died suddenly at his cottage at Beach Haven of heart dlseaso, Mr. Hack was well known in army and society circles In the national capital. Special interest attaches to his sudden taking off because of a divorce suit Instituted against him in Washington recently by his wife. U* TvlU of IIU Gr«*t Huffrriip ftuaom That H» 1)OM >*C H*IWve In aa Opm Polar *•»< !*Tt»fr*«*»r I>ycb« Hrouthf Hack >»liublr CuUr«iioMi NK* Yc»!;a. CV-t. X — Lieutenant Peary. win.i ha* jiMt returned from au ua»u«on» ful attempt tu reaeb the north joie, de- clares th.tt be will never try again r'rom Halifax he truve!e*l to Portland. Me., to vuit hi* mother There he an Dounctftl, in an mter\ »ew yeatvrdaj. that he ia t«>o old f'<r voyaging in (he far mirth, and that be w:ll go tbeo* no more In htf expedition this y%tor he only «ucoe«^te«l it giving lo or lr miles fc%rtb»T to the north ward than be had been l»*f«»re. Profe*>\r l'b«ir»e« l>ychr uf th* I uiver kitjr of KI».»*.K wh<» was *me of the mem hem of the party that rv*rued Pimry ^ ith the Kt« amsli p Kite, nmvml He ernitirtu* the new* ir:tt Pt«ary • expedition wa* a f ai 1 ure Pnife^nr Djrhe arrived at Woodruff'! store*, linmk^yn. on l»uHrd the nteaio»bip Mtvia, from M. John*. N K Tba profeaa or hu* Micceedcvl in making a valuable oollectiou of «i|>eeimen« for hi* university and for the Americau Museum of Natu- ral History in Central park, but he seemed quite blue over Lieutenant Peary* fail- ure in hi* latest attempt to reach the pole, Neither Professor Dyobe nor Kmll Die- bitftch, Peary's brother-in-law, belie vt that the explorer will ever go northward again. At no time this year did he get more than 10 or IS miles farther north than he had been on his first voyage, and tbe expedition was practically barren of any valuable results. Professor Dye he declared that he could not speak itnicially for Lieutenant Peary, but he believed that, tbe explorer ascribed hit failure chiefly to the fact that large quantities of pn^Uion* he had previously stored along tbe route could not be found this time. Therefore be bad to depend for his food supply upon venison, walrus and fish. .Game was very scarce, and Peary's men were compelled to kill and eat three of the go«s that dragired their sleds. Pro- fessor Dyche could not explain wby the cached stores had disappeared. Possibly they had been stolen by natives, or per- haps there had been an error In marking the spots where they were located At all event* the lack of the stores proved a fa- tal handicap to the expedition. Professor Dyche brought back 4,000 specimens of birds, eggs and animals, 26 seals, 18 polar bear* a whal«> and the hide* of SO walruses. He also brought two meteorites from Ironstone mountain, one weighing a, 000 and the other 800 pound* He will go home in a few day* THE VERY LATEST May Ru1» th« Greatest l'*<iacry «o Karth T-\% hat We Owe tbe Straaffer aad What St* Owe* t *• A royal prince landed on oar shore** a month ago. It was an Impor- tant event, but be wasn't an American. He could never beeosne president. That J? why the coining of the stranger to day means »o much Dearer blood courts iu his veiu*. He is one of as* He i» already enrolled upon the *ly register. He way become the X*-\ *i '•****» 7iU every mother^ duty to ffvw these. Bow? Bf *•£** self before b* corns* Ifnhn Wai Ham Oa Kort* FoRTkAKn, Me., Oct. S.—Lieutenant Robert K. Peary, the arctic explorer, ar rived In this city and drove a* ones to his •aoihers home la Plsasantdale. When asked about his plans for the future, the explorer said that he had made no definite Tranrro*, Oet. S.— In the United States circuit court a jury rendered a verdict of _^ $88,000 In a damage suit for 4M>,000| p una but intended ta pass the winter In brought against the Delaware, Lackewan j Xew Vork at Washington, na and Western railroad by Kate K. Pu rtnton of Shorthills, whose husband, Wal- ter Purinton. was killed in the Hacken- meadow* accident in January, lsiA. State Ftremaa'i CO.T« RKADIVG. Pa, Oct. S.—The state fire- men's convention reoruivened. James Oarency of Philadelphia, author of the flemen\s pension bill, delivered a brief ad dres* — Beartbrokei WlLJCESBA- torn* aged lo committed suUrtde by taking poison. requited lore was the cause. SmicMeat rtfteam. HK, Pa., Oct- S. —Isabel Hot- yean, of Luxerne borough. said OD- Un \1 shall never see the north pole, the lieutenant in conversation later, less some one brings it hare. I an with It. In my judgment such work re- quires a far younger man than L The leader of such a party should be able not only to do as much as any one esse* hot more than any other man. He should he less than ftu, rather than more than 40. \lam too old to snowsbue 25 to 80 % miles a day for weeks and t o carry a heavy load during most of the time. For that work one should be a trained thorough athlete, and tnat 1 an not. \Will the pole ever be reached? 1 Cat Hfti Ttirwaft la tha Cat tar. TKKXTOS, rsept. 80. — Charles Leroy Walling, * prominent rubber salesman of this city, committed suicide at his father Welling was found dead in the eel- { with his throat cut. ' 1 believe that H will, and I think the work will be accomplished in a compara ttvely short time. I am, however, no be llever in the existence of the open polar r i never slam\ s I Wb IM*h**erla PBOVIDX*CE, Oct. L—A serious dlph theria epidemic Is raging in the town oi ThoTirton, and the schools have been .»— _• aioseu. While the lieutenant Is convinced that a way to reach the pole will be found he was not ready to express an opinion as to the methods. He was asked if be believed in the possibility of reaching the pole by aid of a balloon and said that he had not given the balloon theory any special thought. *? a Traia. :AsHia*i>, Pa, Oct. 1.—David Tran was decapitated while attempting to board a moving noai train near Girardville. la AUootM. ALTOOYA, Pa.. Oct. K^-Thjt flrnt «;now of tbe feaaon feli here. acrvTfCpanUd by a wave. . . . PHYSICAL STRENGTH, cheerful spirits and the ability to fully enjoy Use, come onlv with a healthy body and mind. Tbe young man who snifers from onsdebilirv, impaired ory, low spirits, irrita- ble temper, and the and one de- of mind body result from* ms> permcl* hahsts ry contracted m yonth, irnon Chtaa OHey» Enf'***** T>eamaad. LfiltDos. Oct. 1.—A dispatch tn*m Pe king onnflrms tbe news given out by tbe British foreign office that a decree has al ready been published in the Peking Offi rial Gazette ordering that Liu, viceroy of Sxe-Chuen. be stripped of his rank for failing to prot<<-{ the niisslonarioi in hit district, snd lhat be be not permitted to aga:n hold <>Gae. Woman Baraext U> Damth, Kgw V »RR, Oct. 2— Mrs Lizrie Erh. the yc»ung wife of a tinoekeeper on tbe Broadway cable road, wat burned to death. her bedridden mother was badly scorched, and the big five story tenement at *U4 Henry street, in which they live, ly escaped being wrecked night all through the boiling over of 8CKAVTOX of Penaflvrv**!* Pa. Oca f —The annua! Retail Liquor Lnagu* of with ovar 80C Tbe address of wel- by ex-Scat* Smator M sf cDonaid. and Prssodent Richard Paw of the league of the most powerful nation on the globe. He should be hailed *rithjoy. How will he be welcomed? What preparations have been made for his comfort and welfare? And what, by the way, is his inheritancer To every woman his coming means a quicker heart beat. Jt has cost something to have him coma Every mother know* that Yet how much he may bring! What do we owe to him and what does be owe to ns? Every mother knows what she owos to the latest arrival She owes him first of all life—robust, natural joy* ous life—the only kind of life worth ] living. But she also knows that she most have that sort of Ufa hexself, that she oant give unless she has it. She owes him a fair chance, a grip on happiness which will give him a grip on fortune. This is a rich inberltani but it is him all them herself is sick nervooa, ent. she is making\ a bmry __ hisyoiinffshof^dem ****£*****£ sound mind, a strong isauswiinsw; sMsm a cheerf ulSs^tion. And these she cannot give unless HJ» costive /I ^ Is hailed with joy instead of feared with sorrow. .. . • Every woman should know thai sci- ence has furnished many improved means of safely rearing ehUdron. And that it has made it aaaj for tbeir mothers when they coma, IitMnaat arrival i s awaited with giving and fsar, there Is wrong. & winiwr»_--- ^ .. __ the wrong sort of a start in life. To make light of the events! and unaturaL The soeftety who regards babies aa ^nfashloo- able^ to past reform. She is a to progress and dviliiatlon. To or shrink from it It a crime, wot by the laws of society but by the law*of heredity, for the mothers conditlot. reacts upon the oftspring. Eirth Is the beginning of all things. It Is the first law of nature. If natur- al It should be easy, and it la always easy when the right preparation is made. One of the most soticsjssfnl woman's physician in America, Dr. E. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., srho has received over 90,000 voluntary written testimonials from woman i n ail parts) of America, knew this when he set out to discover his*'Favorite Perseription. n It is tbe greatest medical discovery of a century, because i t is a double bless- ing. While it arms the mother with peace, strength and comfort, i t also arms her child with the surest promise of happiness and successful manhood or womanhood. And this is the debt we owe to tbe newcomer. If others pay that debt in full the latest Ameri- can will owe os the devotion of a life- time. And he will pay it C05FI&KTIAL CORRK<POSDK3ri:R. Any woman, anywhere, who is tired of suffering, tired of doctoring, or tired of life, who will write to Dr. Pierce, or to the Worlds Dispensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, > Y , of wbieb he is President, will receive, free of charge, good sound professional advice, that will enable ner to euro herself at home uf her ease is curable), pleasantly, without having to under- go the trying ordeal of \examina- tions\ and tbe stereotyped and dreaded treatment by \local applica- tions.\ All such correspondence is treated in the strictest confidence by Dr. Pierce, whose records of over a quarter of a million eases treated, show that there are not three incur- able cases in a hundred. A &BJKAT BOOE When Dr. Pierce publsshed the first edition of his work, Tbe Peoples Common Senas Medical Adviser, be announced that after #30 000 oopsss had been sold at the regular price, $150 per eopT, the profit on whioh woulo repay him lor the groat aanount of labor and sTrrrrrry expessded la pro- ducing it. be would distribute tbe hat '£42 #%* SS ^v>: -m. M I nert half million berof copies haw a! and/ been sosd, _ r fP ^„ ^ wrK>w attributing, absolutely tree, 500.000 copies of this moot complete. BaOOCLTY the murder of Charles W Henry tbe miser may tf^nmln a m The grand >ury deelared that the eTldr&er of the poller against Waiter* H insuhViest tc >sssufy an mdictmec ->*V2 v^rJ ble medicai | publiabad*- •• lent ojsly bntng jnKmirnd toman* to hiav ortbe WorsesDsspesssary Medi of Bnstasa,!!. f ^ af which he is ptusiataC that stttfc ooa> POJT rriBti with twstjty-awn <•> m ooeeeau stasaps to nay far and naakhsg awry, and tlsa will be swnt by awaiL It It tabse &