{ title: 'Olean herald. (Olean, Cattaraugus Co., N.Y.) 1883-1905, September 27, 1884, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn89077026/1884-09-27/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89077026/1884-09-27/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89077026/1884-09-27/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89077026/1884-09-27/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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t;;,~~:!i~~ as a heaTing applics.t1on :~ cuts, bruises, sprains, rheu- Joints, enlarged glands, :blltni.ons; frost bites, chafes, galls, foot rot, and sores of on l1IAN or BEAST, relief m Bnl.'ns and eur\s all sores, no B•cks or Breasts m>n<l'''\\· PrtcP ~5 and 50 Don't be with· whom l c..t.n l!.~ reWIVe ~a love~\' .11nli I will w:r ta, remember my desceut ! 1om the old Ptn'itnn families. A,!!, !f I stwu!d. eve1•, be allowed tO forgot 1tt He ha~> ~(me. whole Thornton famil • rhE> maidmsiS!>I!i'S ino:t. <f,r>t.e on him. lB handsome, with tl}e lov 1est, pa1~ettc, soft brown eyes! He has a hiech-IOre,a nm th!>t renders hiro, q\!tte 1 ~:~:~~~:·i 1 ~~~ altb,•~llllrh J~k himseU'D!iVer I· ha.~ good taste for that-- VII•• ~'\\'''\ will tell you that Jle \comes of the in New England.\ Better than all that, be is the most faithful friend I ever had He never, under any cll'Cumstances, would repeat a word of what I may say to him! Yes. Aunt E. knows all abQut 1t, ~tnd luJ,s not once frowned upon us. lf she does not obJect. why should yo_u1 No. You may say, nothing whatever to Walter Dmand about wntmg me. He ought to know for himself. And what nght nas he tG disectss me 'With you or any one else 1 Your last letter beg11on. \Dear Eliza- beth.\ That name applied to me, always ~erves as a danger-s1gn~tl, so I knew, at once you were ~llspleaood mth me. Please beg:m the next, ''Dear BeSSle,\ and don't be qmlie so severe w1th Yours lovmgly, Bmss. ELMDALE, Aug 15. ANNID, DmAR: Yes. I shall accept \that JaC'k, \-if he ever proposes! and I \th~nk him absolutelv Jllultless \ And may I qsk why you condemn m one young man just what you admire m another1 In other words! Walter Durand \does nothing\ and is 1dl111g away:htstrine down b;r the sea, the petted object of his mother's dotmg soliCI- tude-all of wbJch renders him the more charmmg m your estimation, wh1le Jack Thornton yon berate unmercifully for being that person you \most cordially hate-tlie pet of the fan:il:ly \ 0 consistency I How- aver, I hope you Will now look with a more lement eye upon Jack The other day I went out alone, down by the nver. .At a certain curve m the stream the water settles back ov~r the meadow, leavmg a tmy pond cover· m,; the ~round. The water IS shallow and ,tngnant, and there grow the most be~utiful pond liht>S I came to this spot m my ram- bles, ~d J>IC]fed my \\ay on the decaymg logs out to where they lie m thell' lnsmous, creamy fragrance on the top of the black water. 'I'he. finest....b.unch, m common WJ.th other thmgs of the mundane sphere, was the rnost difficult of access But I meant to have just that bunch, all the same. So, Wlth a leap, that I mtended should do me credit, I tried to reach the mossy log close by the lilie& Bnt, alas] my foot slipped and I landed m the water-if you will excuse the Irish of rtl It 'VI as not s1x mches deep, and I felt no fear until I found myself sinking in the mud be- low I tued to extricate my feet, butfound, UIStead, they were smkmg deeper and deeper! I leaned over and tried t-o P.!!ll msself up by the mossy log m front of me, but it crum- bled to pieces under my touch. Then I re- aliZed that I was rn a quickSand. D1d I con- duct myself in a manner worthy of the de- scendant of that Pllrltnn go,vernorf. No. My i.J.\'W!~.~~(!S<~l;li!lQ. ml!, .and..!. was.t.oo stnpld.eYen the usual femmJDe defense- simply stood there in a dazed myself drawn down, down, an mvlStble power. I re- membered ston~ I had read of peo· ~~~~~~~~?~~~~ Qle wbo had been rescued from qruck· ~ sands,-and wondered why some one did not come to rue ' I thought of papa and you -yes, and of Walter, and wonde1ed if I >hould recognize mamma m heaven, and then I beard Jack's vmce. That romed me, and I could have fallen at his feet m grati- tude, eJCcept for mrcumstanoes over wh1cb I bad no control He rUshed excitedly out to 1vhere I was, makmg a loud outcry, and ca tchmg hold of me, exerted all hiS strength to draw me out But I had sunk to my wa1st, and he-noble fellow !-was not able to pull me up He could, and did, however, keep me from smkmg further, until Uncle DaVId md his men aiTived-whtch wa.s very soon after. For they, all this ttme, were at work m a field near hy, and just out of sight, and 3tarted as. soon as they heard the outcry from the nver. If you are not already par· alyzel by my stup~d1ty m the afi'arr, allow me to add thai; after I was diawn out 1t was disoovcNd that JU.~t behind me, m the water, lay a comparatively sound log, by which, bad I not taken entile leave of my senses (1f [ ever had any, which 18 an unsettled question in my mind), I IUight easily have saved myself at the out.set' But, the fact remams tha same-Jack saved my life. Uncle Dav1d says that a ,man once lost his hfe m that same qmcksa.nd, and I am at a loss whether to thank heaven most for Jack's t1mely appearance, or to wonder at my own -tup1dily. Perhaps, though, now you will forgive Jack for bemg devoted to mel So I close, hopmg you may remember that, but for him, I could not now s1gn myself Your very much \\eaned --EEss. P. S. Evemug. Jack is mma. I have ne1ther t1me nor stl ength now, to explain, but he lB nune I B ELMDtLill, Vt , Aug. 26. MY DEAR ANNE • Most certainly, I will g1ve you full particulars m regard to the engagement. As I sa1d m my postecnpt, Jack IS rome. Moreover, he is mine With the full consent of the Thornton family. And 1f any miSunderstandings may have come about, remembet\ that you always aid \JUmp at conclusiOns \ Let me say;, too, that your !l.'he Ralll•oad VN. the Peon and Hlti DonkeY-Some lUseourae;ln&: Bea• sons-A. Sl~nlllcant Finan• clal lnelden~. [Mexico Cor San FranCisco Chiomcte.] In my qprmon the gJand error of the Amencan cap1taliste and civil engmeers who entel:ed so enthuslastwally UPilll ra.ilway bruldmg m Mexico a few years ago, and the results of whose labors and money expendl- tnre is s~en in the magmficently built line of the Me:tican Central, was that they as- sumed that m Me:x:lco, as :m the Umted States, It is only necessary to push a ra1lway line through a counti:y naturally rwh and prolific to see at once little towns and rap- idly growJDg VIllages svrmgmg up all along its line and thus create busmess for the road. Such IS the h1Btm y of all our Amencan railroads But MeXICO is a totally different country from the Umted States--the Mex.t· cans are a race wholly difl'eren t m ideas of buSiness, of pohtic8, of commerce, from the c1tizens of the Umted States And what would have taken place m the case of a rail- way bmlt thus many part of the Unlted Htate~ has not taken place here, nor IS 1t likely to for many years t-o come, 1f ever. Now, after a porwon of ti)e Mex1can Cen- tral railway-that from the capital to Q~re taro, a1'd from El Paso to Chihuahua- has been m active operation durmg two years nearly and the entire main line smce April. last, there are no more settlements along the line th~ n there eXISted three years ago, no new towns, no colomes formed, no mcreased activity m busmess whatever, save only that produced by the arn val of an occas10nal pllJ'ty of Amencan t-ounsts or busmess men on a prospecting tour and the u.mallocal busmess picked up by a railroad, whtch busi- ness was formerly It ansacted by other com• Send us 5 gross of Shedd's L1ttle Mandrake Pills; such 1s the utdcr rece1vell, nnd why • Be- onuse ttiey al\\aystlo just wh~t they are recom• mended to do Che C01n~ng Democ> at sttys tlint a numbel of apple and plum hces m th.t nllage are.n bloom for the s~oond tuue th1s s~~son CllppB<I from the Canada Presbytm tan, under siguatme of c. Dlaokett Robmson, proprietor: I \as cured of oft recurnng billlous b~atlaches , by Bmdock mood Ettters. George W. Hamilton, uf Fredonm, the cham- piOn JUmper of the \\ olld, 1s out m 11 challenge oJlermg nny man 1n the wo1ld SIX mches 1n one smgle broad Jllmp for $1,000 a sule. IFYOU WISH To enJOY good health, ami pre' ent tne seeds of d1seuse f1om r1pemng m yam system, you suould use the best medJcme 111 the woild, lllttl- phm· Bitters, whwll wtll pre\ ent your system from bell)g all ruu down by mnkmg 1t strong and v1gorons.-REV \!IT. R SNOW. The president-of the Trades' Assembly1eport• that there a1 e fl om 20,000 to 25,000 Idle men Ill CmcJDnatl, aml yet the1e a1e silly fellows \\ho run a wav w1th the not10n that 1 tbor I flo. not de- mandmg a change m the admm1strat1on of Fed- era) allmrs. ~ITS -AlD'its stopped free by DR. KLINE'S GREAT NEl\VE UE•TORER. l'io l! tts afterllrst d.ny's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $.:!.0.0. tnal bottle free to l! 1t cases. Send to Dr. Kh.n'e, 981 A~oh St., Ph1la, Pa. lJ r. It nntated that the lecturers of the present season at Chautauqm< 1ecetve almut twenty thousand dollats, anti the speeml mstruct01s m Hebre\t, Greek, LMm, B!(nlpturc, mustc,art nnd othei departments nearly as mnch moiC. A Young Wiles GJ·eatest Tr1a1. The'gtente>t trtal of a young wife's life'\ tlw birth of a child, which 1s .usnally attentletl wtth mu.ny hours of hrud luLm : nd utten::;e llUlD, mon carriers PAINJ .. ~f:o),s CIIILDBUU .H 1 a new book by one Even this latter 1tem IS not wholly arquired of New York's most enunent physwwns, howev- by tile 1ailw ay company, for the reason that er, shows that pam IB not necessary in chiltl- m thlB c:mntiy the people ara bnth, but results from causes euSilJ untlerstood ;u~~f~~~iirf~~~-~~!~~!i'i-i·~----~ cpnoo~we and eH~·~t~-~k~-{~,hi·~ru~-f-~n~~·~unte.-~\pr~~~~~nruuswG~4~~~-a~11--n[ methods. The peon has hiS one or two don• woman may become u mother Without ex pen en- >.;.,;,.<,;,h,,~,;- keys that hve on next to nothing Why cmg any pam what\'\'· It ~tl•o tells how to should he pay the company for freighting h1s overcome ant! prevent morning Sickness, swelled frmt, vegetables, charcoal, -straw, hay, pot- limbs, nervousness, pain In back, ana ail tbe tery, etc, to the nearest market town when unplesant sens:mons attendmg pregnane). It he can just as well carrY, them m on hiS pa· answers hnrulreasof tlellcate questions about tient JacRa.ss at no expense whatever 1 Of wmuen and their peculiar troubles. Physwmns course he loses time thereby, but that don't b1ghly 1ecommend 1t, and say it \\111 do all that count; tb:tte is not a valuable cotnmod1ty m IS clalmett for u. Send a two cent st.nnp fo1 thlSsetnl-olvillzed country, where manana IS tull desrtpttvaclrCitlar testimomals, &c., sent JUSt as good as \to-day and usually much m sealed envelope. Address, .I!' RANK TllOMAS better. &;Co., PubltshePS;-BnlhmQt\e Md. • Hence, as you may readily soe, the ],pea} we Jearn that Mr. w. G. Ransom, of Ashford, busmess of the Mencan Central ill but small has made an nsstgnment to George P, Kellog, of and not increasmg rapidly The prospect& Sprmgv1lle. Ll.lbllitles not known Mr. R. ful' an increase of any importance are not was a heavy loser by the faJlure-of the bank of good, not at least for some years, for the fol- Havana several yeats ago, and is now further lowm1tTBaoons1 embi\rtnsse1!1>y tlle recent :!llDure or Jllr Shut- First-This country 111 so badly governed, tlewor!h. Mr. 11anoom IS an extensive fmmer, the admlnistratwn is so corrupt, the oppres- and fol several yearB hns been Identified wlth s1on of the merchants and manufacturers so the nullmg mte 1 e•ts m Sprmgville and at East great by the opposttion of unJust, extortion- Pike. ate and vexatious taxations and 1m posts, as to discourage new-comers from mvestmg11 money m busmess here. Second-A wide-spread and almost uni- versal commermal and financial depression rest:B upon the people, prevent!J;lg them from eJCtendmg busmess enterprises( which would brmg gnst to the railway's m11l in the shape of freight tolls and paBSage fares. Instead of extenswn of business, contrat'tion is gomg on constantly, and thts state of affatrs bas not only eXIsted already upwards of seven months, but buls fa1r to contmue mdeflnitely Thlrd-The Mexicans are not an enter- priSing people, as I have explained above They cling to old ways, do not travel much, and when they do they economiZe, go second or third class, mth rare exception, indeed, the greater portiOn of the people are forced to economize closely m order to eke out an eJCIStence Though I have carefully studied the subJect, with a preconceived b1as in favor of MeXICI!,ll trade11.S a greatoutffit:forma•1y of our American manufactures, I have Je- luctantly come to the conclnston that wo Amerrcans have boon huggmg a deluswn, we have been dece1vmg ourselves, there IS no such grand field for the extensiOn of our fore1gn trade as many writers have for years been tellmg us does exist m Me:tico. That IS all false, and the sooner Amer1cans, especially Amencan manufacturers, i;!eco,me convmced of this fact the better 1t will be for them. They Will then be saved from tnany disap- pomtments resu1tmg from unsuccessfnl ven- tures m trade here. MEDICINE FOU. CHILDREN M11st not only be ellectlve but so compounded that no harm \Ill result from the use. Such a prepar11t1on for worms [to which almost every chtld 1s snhJect) ts Parmelee'• Santomne Worm Oandtcs, which are mn~e from the best drugs, parttcnlarly adapted to th1s use. They work qtuckly, SUI'ely and harmlessly, passing otr the worms after they nre dts•olve<l. Do not neglect the chtldren even though they ~o not compltun. Worms are almost aiWIIJS present. Pnce 25 eta. per box Sold l.ty Dr Coon, llanks, J B. Smith, Smttb & Dunn and Pnlace drug store, QUICK RELIEF Hamtlton's Jamaca Ginge> Tonic and llztn Cure 1s not only a' nluable mtemal remedy for ail stomach nnct bowel d11llcultw• such ns dys- pet sm. lDdlgestwn, henrthurn, J1atnlence, (har- rhoen1 rlyB\ntery cramps und colic, bnt cannot be exrellPd fm an out\mtl apphcntwn m rhett- mat.Ism, Q.43.tfm.J.gur, -seiftti-ca-, S(JI'ItinS, sfde nnd backache and stuuns m ~ny part of the body {;sed freely \\tth wnrmtlt and rnhbmg 1t gl\rs qmck rehef Pru e 2a anrl 50 rent• per bottle. Sold by D>'. Coon, Hanks, J. B Snnth, Smith & Dunn nnd P.tlace tlt ug store. - ---- ~--=:..._.!!._- mill..;fOicy.91l--ftlaE\--Bhttrti;e,-wlllT-f-lli~·of news-- in-~ to Waltet Dm and's gomg to the mountams was stale by the time 1t reached me. For he came to the Green mountains Yesterday, just after our early tea Jack and I went up to my \mossy bo;er\ to vra1t for the coming S1111set. I took a boo~ and Jack stretched hmiSe:lf at my feet.. An hour or two aftei'Ward, just as the fleecy clouds on the western horizon were taking on the r,osy sunset tints, a shadow feU !lcroso the grass m front of me, and a sudden voice caused me to drop my book. I was on my. feet m an mstant, and the next mmute, both of Walter Dur.,nd's a.rma were around By the way, permit me to digress from the mbJect an l.!lSta.nt to relate an mctdent Whil.e_canversmg last evening with a fr1end here, who has extens1ve busmess transactiOns With the Mencan govermnent, he told me that he had mthin the past two weeks made many calls upon the ch1ef of the treasury de- partment to collect his \little bill\ of some thousands of dollars, and that the last~ttme he pa1d that official a visit of that nature the functionary, to show 1 l:tow impDllSible It was to li<..u.Q.ate the national floating debts, pulled fr~m his desk a pile of telegrams and letters and .handed them to my frrend to read. He says they ran mostly in thiS fashion: =- --, Commandant of_._ llegiment, to Minister of War, MeXlcO All of our sup- piles are exhausted, cannot get ctel1t; haven't got a dollar. Send us sunphes or me, I would not describe the hour that fol- lowed if I could, but next year I shall prob· 11bl:y be an jnmate of tlie Durand cotf.;ge. 11e sa.ys he never shonld ha VEl been wrlling to take the :fu'st st<'llJS toward a reconciliatwn [f you had not tnade him half frantic w1th Jrlnte of \tnat J11ck.\ And I say that, while I knew I was the Ollti :tnost at fault in the 1uarrel, perhaps I knew what Jack might do for tne. So, thanking you, for the mtermed- dling which has restQrfld to l,ll.e my Walter, I am, very hliDlbly yours, BESS p S. What about Jack! , Why, nothing; only that he goes lfitl,l ua all, ne:x:t week, to Boston. ¥ ou will then llee him, and can judge for yourself if I bave wrrtten aught concQrning him that wa.s not strictly true. He certamly, has loving brown eyes, da.rk curling hair, noble qualit1es, and lB of gentle birth-as dogs go. For Jack lB a full-blooded Newfoundland! Yours, willibg ilo oo forgiven, BESSIE.' money 1mmediately. - --. On board Me10,can man -of-war--, U mted States To the Minister of the Navy, Mex. 1 co· Nearlv all our supplies used up; coal all exhausted, no money and no cred1t. Telegraph us a remittance a.t once. And so on. DISpatches from garrisons in frontier towns, from unpaid customs offimals, from unpaid telegraph operators on the .government lines, from all classe~ anllsorts of public servants and functionanes-ail.ask- lDg for coin. My friend did not get the 8 hekels for which he came. He departed from the presence of t~e wa.t<Jhdog of th~ treasury a sadder and a Wl!!er tnan. 'I'he necessity Of \a. vigorous foreign policy\ on the part of the .American gpvermnent 1ll becoming more and more impreSsed upon the minds of citizens of the United States who are compe11ed to stay here for bnslness pUl·- poses tor assuredly no American ever s op~ maity days in this poverty-stricken and lawless country Ullless h1s businoos com- pelled htm to do so. The &Clvocates of \a c)oser international intercourse ibetween the twp s 1 ster republics\ are very gtl!lhing at times m the1r remarks about the \nnmense il.dvantages cerlain to flow from a. closer commerc1al intercoul'll8 between the two people& \ But let any Amerlcan who tanc1es that the MeDcans ate waiting to rece1ve him with open arms and joyful enthus1asm just come down here as I hav-~ donb and he w1ll fi'!-d the exao, reverJM to be the case. When· ever you sound them caref~y you find the followmg to be the truth in the matter; Either they hate Amer1cans or else they d.is trust and teal' theta. --....\'\'-'-.......,.:;.._- ..............