The sunny South. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1875-1907, June 23, 1906, Image 3

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JUNE 23, 1906. HE SUNNY SOUTH '■THIRD 'PAGE I Madrid * ers: >w n £••, zeeive Outrage Will ^ Against Weld World Vendetta Anarchy ♦ ♦ 4 4 ♦ 4 aft« ielf ijdrul peril of i rodQ J I«s s than r>< of ?Yan('p; th United Stn-tes-. J-'.mpre* HE noise of the exploding^ bomb that killed twenty in nocent persons at Madrid, nnd only by a hairbreadth foiled of taking the life of King Alfonso anj this young bride, Quoen Victo ria, soundod, as surely ns the sun rises and sets, the death blow of anarchy round ICie world. It was a tocsin, a clar ion call, to bring the na tions Into union against the the ••reds.” a decade. President Car- President McKinley, of Elizabeth. of ■ 9 b 9 ••'m—~-9:-9 9*-9-»-9»-9:-9:-9—9-9—9.9*9.-9—9 --b—b—b—i A stria.; King Humbert, of Italy; Pre- nrf Cattovas, of Spain; Grand Puke Sextus, of Russia, and three or .four liun- <lr<l persons of less import, have fallen ! bj the hand of assassins who found J tb'r only excuse in the teachings of the j T*! flag 3ut dastardly a? (ht^ve been these out- j rates, they pale before the horror of the j laest attack on the established order. Vhy any one conid wish to kill Al- I •for.so is a mystery. In -his brief time ! as king be has shown manliness nn,j lion- j desire to serve the beat interests of! Mj people in al! rank®, nnd his subject 1 r<- most loyal to him. HI? bride, a lovely girl, certainly had , done nothing in her innocent young life ! that could by ar.y perversion of fact j be termed oppressive, yet on their nup- ; day, that time of all times when j the sympathy of the world should go out j to them, the murderer's hand was raised 1 to strike them down. 1- the king and bride had been blown to .its. the horror of the world would : have been indescribable, ana the extermi nation of the reds would have been voted j the first duty tlrat confronted civlliza-; HABIT-FORMING MEDICINES AND DRUGS. Whatever may be the fart as to many ' scription.” " in dysmenorrhoea (painful of the so-called patent, medicines con- periods), it is surpassed bv no other drug, taming injurious ingredients as broadly being of ihe greatest utility in irritative published in some journals if more or and congestive conditions of the uterus less influence, this publicity has certainly and appendages characterized by tensive, been of great, benotit, in arousing needed dragging pains resembling the pains of attention to tills subject. It, has. in a, rheumatism.” lie continues: "It is a considerable measure, resulted in the good remedy for the reflex (side aches) most intelligent people avoiding such of unmarried women.” He also reeom- foods and medicines as may be fairly sus- mends it, for uterine leucorrhoea, also for peeted of containing the injurious tngre- sterility. He further says, "its action is clients complained of. Recognizing this slow, hut its rfj'cts are permanent.” He fact some time ago, I)r. Pierce, of llnffalo, ‘also recommends this agent for St. N. V., "tool; time by the forelock," as It Vitus’s dance, also for many rheumatic were, and published broadcast all the j conditions, as does also Hobart A. Hare., ingredients of which his popular modi- M. It., professor in the Med. Dept.. T,’ni- cines are composed. Thus lie has coin- versitv of Pa. Other agents entering into plotely forestalled all liarping critics and the ” Favorite Prescription’' are equally all opposition that might, otherwise he praised in the little book of extracts from urged against his medicines, because* they prominent medical authors whose pub- are notv of known composition. Fur- lished works are consulted by physicians thermore, from the formula printed on , of all the several schools to guide them in every bottle wrapper, it. will he seen that these medicines contain no alcohol or other hahit-forining drugs. Neither do they contain any narcotics or injurious agents, their ingredients being purely regotfible, extracted from the roots of prescribing. "Golden Medical Discovery " as also Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription may be relied upon to cure all the diseases and more than ail that their several ingre dients are represented as curing, by the medicinal plants found growing in the : above eminent physicians, for they are so J depths of our American forests and of compounded that each ingredient acts in ( well recognized curative virtues. ; harmony with all the others, and also ' Instead of alcohol, which even In small enhances their curative action. Tbev ; portions long continued, as in obstinate j mav be taken conjointly in alternate j cases of diseases, becomes highly objec- , doses with great advantage. ! ti on able from its tendency to produce a ; The most, intelligent, people are fast craving for stimulants. Dr. Pierce em- : coming to the conclusion that it does not ! ploys chemically pure, triple refined pay and is not safe to resort to medicines 1 glycerine. which of itself Is a valuable I doubtful composition when there are remedy In many cases of curonlc disease, . those in the market every ingredient of j be ?. 1 ^- a s, |P er l° r demulcent, aiiti-septic, which is published on their wrappers and ■ anti-ferment and supporting nutritive. 1 which are so strongly praised and en- 1 i e i 1 i ha o ,W i S * I) 0 curative action of t lit* <|orsed by scores of those most eminent, i Golddn Seal root,Stono root,lilac.c Cherry- | u t-he niedicnl profession. Secret, medi- bark and Bloodroot, contained in' Golden ,-ihes can. of course, have, no sttch pi'o- 1 Medical Discovery. In nil bronchial, fesslo-nat endorsement. 1 throat and lung affections attended with severe coughs. As will tie seen from tho writings of the eminent. Drs. Grover Coe. of New York; Bartholow. of Jefferson Medical College, Phila.; Scudder. of Gin- ' cinnatl; Lllingwood, of (.’hiirngo; Hale, Of Chicago, and others, who stand as leaders In tlnjir several schools of prne- ln favor of Dr. Pierce’s medicines is the frank, confiding, open, honest state ment of t.heir full composition, giving every ingredient in plain English, with out fear of successful criticism and with confidence that the good sense of the afflicted will lead them t-o appreciate this honorable manner of confiding to them t, 1 co. the foregoing agents are the very , n „ ( i r ?, raRnm “ r . of confiding to ‘nem best ingredients that Dr. Piercft could " hat they are taking .Into their stomAchu havo chosen to make tip his famous " hen niRKing use of the. e medicines. best have chosen to make up Discovery” for tho cure of not only bronchial, throat, and lung affections, but, also of chronic catarrh in ail its various forms In whatever part of the system located. By reading the writings of these emi nent medical men contained in the little booklet recently complied bv Dr. R. V. Dr. Pierce feels that, ho can afford to take the afflicted into his full confidence and lay all the ingredients of his medi cines freely before them because these ingredients arc such as are endorsed apd most strongly praised by scores of ine most emineni medical writers of all the sovoral schools of practice as cures for PROPOSAL FROM AMERICA. T!iere is no reason why It should bo ies*> so now. Tlho blood of twenty slnin In Madrid's streets, twenty citizens, free of al-i offense, and rejoicing in the happy marriage of their sovereign, demands jus- t-'ce. The duty of the authorities is not only to avenge them, but t,o forestall the shedding of more innocent blood. Mr. Andrew P. White, a 'patriot of com manding ability, former United States ambassador to Germany, has proposed the plnn by which the deside,1 end can be achieved. His idea is that the police de partments of ;he world should unite, and be empowered by international ‘agree ment, to act with unrelenting sternness Piorro, of Buffalo. Xi Y., which will be ! the d<s « ases for which these medicines sent free, on request by postal card or aro recommended. Gregory Maxime, Russian Revolutionist Now Spreading His Doctrines in America. to hold «■ five days’ Emma Goldman, Most Notorious Woman “Red” in America. lhad the effrontery convention. At this conventSon step® were taken for concerted action In spreading the propa ganda of the red flag throughout 1he entire world. Leaders of the "reds” from Russia, Italy. Spoln and Germany were the guests of honor of the live local anarchist organizations If the ''reds” are to have their way, France, too. Is given ever to tlie on use of bloodshed and disorder. There the! Russian writer. Alexander Amplteatroflf. make In KuTope hts favorite means of taking life. If our own secret serv'ee officers were more vigilant in this re spect, less harm would be done. The recent effort on the life of Vic toria, queen of Spain, has had the ef fect of rousing England as never before. The attempt to kill an English princess has stirred those who gave little thought to the crime of anarchy as long as its manifestations were confined to the con tinent. Europe h'as long complained that rh_* has commenced the publication of a new j spread of anarchism and its virtual Im- joitrnal in the Russian language entitled) I The Red Flag | 'The programme of the new paper is do- i scribed as "war to the death against | czardom, even constitutional czardom. | and the establishment, in Russia of a fed- I erul republic." 1 The Re,t Flag will have guile a'constei- ; lation of able writers on its staff, among | them the celebrated poet, Balmont, who j In the first number announces that he has done with czardom forever, and pub lishes inflammatory verses in which (lie wherever they will over the length and- breadth of the United States. Voltairine de Cleyre is another promi nent ''red'' woman in this country, whoso only punishment, of consequence, for anarchy, was her attempted murder by a youthful adm-irtr, who failing to gain h*r love, turned Miss de Cleyre’s teach ings to good account, by shooting and badly wounding his cold-hearted teacher. GORKY’S PALL. Men like Maxim Gorky who are now in this country, are allowed to say pret ty much anything they want; in fact, but for the lucky accident that exposed the low morals of Gorky, and his tele gram of sympathy to Ihe murderers of Governor Steuenbe-rg, almost before he had been In the country a day, the Rus sian could have had a triumphal tour , across the country, teaching any extreme, j This does not mean that Gorky is not j a brilliant ,writer or that his own con- | duct w 1 aid not always be moderate or > letter, addressed to him. as above, tho reader will find that all the several native, medicinal roots entering into tho "Golden Medical Discovery,” as also into Dr. IMerce’s Favorite Prescription, for Your druggists sells the ” Favoritb Prescription” and also that, famous alterative, hlood purifier and stomach tonic, tho "Golden Medical Discov ery." Write to Dr. Fierce about your just, but his theories given to a weaker 1 • „ mind might be the incentive to the death \ C ,C_ I i of a president. Tt is for that reason that the police of tljis country should have done with mawkishness, and deal with the fanatics as they deserve. It is a disgrace to our Mine that modern civilization cannot protect itself against the attacks of these human beasts. There is no sense or reason in permitting secret plottings to run on until they burst, forth In fire and slaughter. The mulignment combines can be searched out. and the bomb-throwers can be captured 311I hanged by the neck until they are Dad. The .duty of the nations is clear. woman’s weaknesses and peculiar ai!- ; (as0 - Tie is an experienced physician nients. are very highly recommended and 1 a,| d will treat your ease as confidential praised as cures for diseases for which j and without charge for corre3pona : Dr. Pierce advises those famous medi- ence. Address him at the Invalids nos of his preparation. | Hofei and Surgical Institute, Buffalo. Dr. Ellingwood says of Golden Seal j N. V.. of which he is chief consulting root, whiclt is an important ingredient phvsician. in both "Favorite Prescription" and *’ i* as ea<! y fo be well as ill — and "Golden Medical Discovery,” "it is an> ln,lcl1 comfortable. Constipation important remedy in disorders of the 1 * f ! ^ e *’ R,lse of many forms of illness, womb.” He continues: "In nil catarrhal : Hr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con- conditions, especially In flabby, muscular ] si.potion. They are tiny, sugar-coated relaxation and general enfeeblemeiit, it pnuiules. One little " Pellet ” is a gentle is useful." Prof. Scudder. late of Gin- : motive, two a mild cathartic. All dealers in medicines sell them. 4 4 •t 4 Leon T. Czolgosz, Assassin of President McKinley. a,gainst anarchists till the scourges of j mankind are exterminated and scattered, j Steps have already been taken to bring 1 atiout this end. j The value of tsii'Ch a course is that of .' the ounce of prevention being worth a j pound of cure. With suoh cooperation in j force, a careful watch can be kept on a.I known anarchists the world over, and | now ones discovered beforq they have , ■had time to act. Then plots will bo fore stalled, and instead of vengeance aftor t e deed, life can be saved, and the dis turbers of the world's pence housed fur life In jail or else sentenced to death ns men who aro likely at any time lo toko life. T nder such an agreement th© instant a r ted anarchist moved from one country to another, or one city to another, he v >uld be arrested, and taken back, and tids would have the result of segragat- lrg the dangerous, and keeping them where they will be harmless, because un- d»r the eye of the police by whom they fire known. It Is the charge of European govern ments, and not without a good foundation In fact, that the laxity of the United States nnd British governments lias done much to permit the spread of anarchy Ir the world. The groat devotion that, prevails in both countries to the right of free speech, has caused the palliation of much that is incendiary, an,j surcharged with peril. In Ifvde Park, London, every Sunday an archists hold public meetings and openly promulgato their doctrines. Sot even the Haymarket riots or the ! czar js denounced as a sanguinary mon. | | ster, who ought to end ills days on the 1 [ scaffold. I The editor has a prose article In the j same vein. j The Red Flat? is said to have quickly | | attained a circulation of ten thousand, j j It will be sent to Its subscribers in Rim- j | sia In sealed envelopes ( PATERSON, THE HOTBED, j In Paterson, N. J., the hotbed of an-1 iarchy In the United States, and perhaps, i the worst hotbed of anarchism in the j I world, the place from which Bresci, the! I Italian murderer of King Humbert, of ■ Italy, started on h.is errand of crime | j for which he ha^ been drawn by ballot. . 1 they are openly rejoicing over 1 hp attempt! on the king and queen of Spain, and, make no secret of saying that the next I time it will be successful. Indeed, there ; i s some ground for believing that the ; p'’ot was hatched in Paterson. | There they have made a saint of ihe monster who struck down McKinley, and Circus Makes Its Greatest Conquest Among Barbarous Folk lion to its general effect on the system. ! A good medical book, written in plain " there Is no merlUrine in use about English, and free from technical terms which there is such i/eueral unanimity of | Is a valuable work for frequent const;ita- opinion. It is universally regarded as , tlo.i. Such a work is Dr. Pierce’s Com- i the tonic, useful in all debilitated states.” mou Sense Medical Adviser. It’s a book _ i Dr. Bartholow says that Golden Sea! ! of 100S pages, profusely illustrated. It ! root, is "valuable in uterine hemorrhage is given away now, although formerly ’ (bleeding), hemorrhagia (flooding) and j sold in cloth binding for $1.50. Send 21 ♦ congestive dysnienorrnteaj painful men- j cents, in one-eent stamps, to pay for cost • j struation).” ; of mailing only for paper-covered copy, 1 Prof. John King, author of the Ameri-| addressing Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, can Dispensatory, says of Black Cohosh : N. Y.: or .1t cents for an elegantly cloth- root. another ingredient of "Favorite, Pro- j bound copy Voltairine dc Cleyro, Prominent An archist Teacher. rmirUt.v are due to the free asylum of fered to even Its most vicious represen tatives by Great Britain. It was tho British government which vetoed concerted action 'for protection gainst this danger a few years ago by OU city folks don’t _ real thing about the cir cus. Even the sawdust does: : smell tho same. And sitting in a chair to see a show like ours takes all the salt out of the thing and mate it flat.” The speaker was a good- natured canvassman who has traveled with several shows. Between puffs at a long-stemmed pipe he went on with his fascinat ing talk. "l>o you know that the red-skinned, wild and untuttored Indian beats the city circusgoer all to pieces for loyalty and enthusiasm? lie will put up with all kinds of hardships to get the price and travel or walk for days to reach the place. I think he likes the circus bet ter than the negro, although, of course, he -doesn’t make any fuss over it. "Every circus man knows that the ne- declinlng to take part in an international I g ro would sell the roof over his head essassination of President McKinley* has J will be President Roosevelt. And there r TTiced to awaken this country to a sense i Is no question of doubt that he lias been of tho peril, but now this latest attempt i in grave danger revcral times oil tine life of rulers is relied upon to force action. It is high time. The followers of the red fln.jj were never more active. There are no fewer tlinn t»n anarchist clubs in London with a ir.embershl'p of thousands. The propa ganda is spreading in this country, and 11,« anarchists of Chicago have actually , conference on the subject. It has, therefore, been saidi that Britain 1 has (purchased immunity for her roya! . family and other authorities by making j r. tacit bargain .with the most despicable criminals that infest the earth. Loud-mouthed creatures, who opnly brag of their murderous intentions in j London, fully understand that they will | be driven out of the country the moment I they lift their hand against a Britisli official. I Denial of the Scotland Yardofflcials that the Madrid plot was concocted In London cannot be accepted. Evidence ' that it was fully known there days be- ' fore the royal wedding is overwhelming. ; T’.j, question now pressing for solution is js&at The 'future policy of the Briiisn au'-Trit ies toward avowed conspirators against human life, who make their headquarters in that country.will be. Complaint on the continent is becoming so insistent that the government will soon make a move looking to a general consultation as lo how best to deni with the problem by International measures. AMERICA TOO TOLERANT. America would ;lny a prominent part In such a cnference. The expulsion ef anarchists from London would drive the bulk of them a-cro's the Atlantic. Their numbers aro langc. The worst that can be charged against the United States in the conlrovfrsy. that it has been too tolerant of rcvaUi- ' tlonary speech. Johann Most taught Many of the bombs which are to be vlo i. n ce all hts life, yet he was permit- found In tho lvoepin.er of anarchists al! ! remain at lar#<\ and barring- occa. oi cr France. Italy. Russia and Spa n . sional arrests for especially threatening r.re undoubtedly made in th*- T nit-vi 'outbreaks, arrests that were follow ,i States, for the poiige of tho con'inm. by brief tern . lS ln jail . he was not serl- to their credit, keep such careful ( ouslv interfered with w-atrli on the material*: that enter ttie elephant anu feed but thr Indian will his squaw- or even possession- -his horse well as t oe best .seats. Some of them came in handsome coaches drawn by •handsome horses and they sat ln boxes. R.ioh Chinese merchants gave matinee parties, tlie men wearing richly embroid ered gowns, the women clad In costly rilks, cut in the form of dresses, but as a man wears his broadcloth. At one matinee given in a California town there were 6,000 Chinamen and 2.000 japs. H1s lace lias no more life in it than the butt end of an oak log. When the Indian hkes a thing in the circus he simply grunts. lie sits with his face in his hands and ills elbows on his knees, hut iiis eyes rove around the tent and take ;n everything:. ODD MIXTURE IN ARIZONA. "The oddest mixture of people I ever saw was at a town in Arizona. Indians, Mexican greasers. Japs, negroes, China men and cowboys crowded the tent and squatted comfortably on t'he racing track. Ihe Indians and Chinamen were quiet, as vsu'al, but the crwpunchers, greasers and negroes made the air ring. The cowboys these simple people, dusty and tired, but glad enough to sing, the babies rolling in the d'tist and the parents drinking ditch water. Some of the people probab.y had never ridden on a railroad before. The young girls were pretty. I know lives longer and drinks In more real pleasure every day of his life because of this appreciation of the circus by -tlie w hole world. He knows that there 1s nothing else ln an amusement way that lUkc up t ne. whole breakfast table. Tire this will jar you. on account of the story \ p,c: person who leans on his crutch like that these people are lank and colorless Don't you believe it. They had faces that had Just enough red in them to make a fellow hungry for a kiss and their eyes were as bright as a cambric needle. And my! how happy they were! FACTORIES IN QUEBEC CLOSE. I “When a show goes through the Quebec province tho factories close down. They might as well. No matter how poor the man or how hard lie must work when his favorite circus comes along, he becomes a king in feeling and rounds up his j family for one full day of pleasure They like the music and the antics of the clown. The English side of the audi ence loiters about the menagerie until the last call and shows the most satisfac- i tion when the dancing features of the i spectacle of the vaudeville part of t'he pro- Alexander Borkman, Assassin of Frick, Who Has Just Been released From Jail. fiijaln arifl s^g-aln rumors emanate from there that tho next ruler to be stricken | ouslv interfered with, and was allow id , to round out a rlpo old ag^ as a teacher the mixing of high explosives that it of tho doctrino that in mur , d Is hard for the follower of nnarehy Order FtDitfOia by : Mail Kentucky’s Great Whiskey Express Prepaid from Distiller to You a n _|l-_ c I__ £ c of thoroughly matured highest medicinal. Pure Rjre or m 03II 011 * lOl 43i Bourbon Whiskey or one gallon each, in Myers’ j>at- ent glass demijohns, and to prove FULTON ia the best Whiskey, you need send no money We ship on 30 dnya # credit If you ■will have your merchant or hank truarantoo account. FREE—4 miniature bottles of Selected Fulton with each II gallon demijohn or 8 quart bottle order accompanied with car,h. Full Ouart Bottles of Ryeor Bourbon are or pressed prepaid in plain boxes, cither '* for $3., H for SO. or 12 r or SO. If not satisfied with goods, re turn, and if paid for all your money will be refunded by first mail. —•MYERS A COMPANY, fttnn* U.8. Itro. Pist’t Xo. 22. firn Put. Rt. Odes from 2/nn».. Wy., Colo., X.Mot. «ud tb*?r«nf, jobs: coll for either >0 full qoar*. bott!-«. cr 6 galloo* Ik dsmijottoa. or 3 rm«k. for by |>rf|>«.4 frMjrh*.. Writ* for e i»ress tortns. ^ ir book "A Fair Cuttomer” Mailed Ffee. '_—J "Zr make no ! distinction between king and president, i innocent or guilty, th© good ruler or the hud one. Emma Goldman, with but slight, pun ishment*;, hns been allowed to go on her way for years. Even after Lon F. ( zolgosz. the ns'osstn of President Me- to get money to s him with peanuts, barter his papoose his moist cherished —to get a ticket. "After the negro comes theChinaman. The showy things about the circus hit the yellow-skinned laundrytnan right whore he lives. He will lo >k up all his relatives, fine them up in single file and then march out to show lots ns happy as a kid on -Christmas morning. INDIANS GO 200 MILES. "The Mexican, too. i s a warm baby when he hears tho toot of the oaliope. Tho laziest greaser on tho Texas border, who never paid a bet in his life, will show up elreus day with 50 cents in liis hands, 'though nobody knows where ho j daytime, got it. But the Indian is the greatest fiend of them all. "In some places, like MissCula. Mont., fitly one-half of the • circus audience is made up of Indians. They come from as far as 200 miles on horseback, nnd even on foot, starting on tliel long jour ney day© before the circus date and arriving promptly on the morning of the day inf exhibition. "On circus day it is a oa-e of every man for himself with the Irlians. The lord of the tepee brings eno'gn trinkets in the shape of moccasins ant bows and arrows to peddle around tewn nnd in this way he gets money em-igli for his own admission ticket. The Stuaw brings little baskets and lias to liu-tle for her own ticket. They generally come in roupies astride a pony nnd if the mar ket is overstocked with Indian relies they will .sell the nag. "After the show is over (he chiefs pro ceed to fill their skins with the white man’s firewater and the squaws, with the papoose, wait on the l.mber piles »r sand heaps until t-lie g'av streaks begin to spread over the tills and then the unsteady stream winds .out of town over tlie trail homeward. CHINESE TURN OUT IF FORCE. “The Indians buy the lies: seats, too. You will find most of them on tho re- England takes the circus '(ins liked the gyrnnas-l acts and opened their voices until! they were worn and hoarse. The clowns! caught the negroes and they laughed ! until the ground shook. That night the! cowboys and the greasers turned the town! into a shooting gallery, emptying revolvers at the stars and expressing their sorrow at the going away of the circus | by licking up all the refreshments in thej town. “When a circus tours the southern states the cotton fields are deserted.! Every negro within a radius of 100 miles' has to see the performance jf h© sells! ■his shirt to do It. YYhite folks usual] j go at night time and t'he negroes in the ’ some towns ' a cane, as well as the rosy-cheeked boy and girl, turn to the circus tent for com mon enjoyment. The in-between fellow who makes tho sidewalk ring when he walks and has gathered up enough money and power to be proud, comes along Just the same, though he may raiaa his eyebrows at tiie suggestion. Oircua people are held together by an invisible golden chain of sympathy. They must depend upon each other and before their sands of life have run out they are apt to know- something about the sorrows of existence. "They live outdoors most of the year. Sui.shine and fresh air never hurt any body. They are a peaceful people, al ways -busy and rigidly exacting with each other in matters of right living and right doing. If there is ever a second edition of home it is to be found in the railroad train upon which live circus i»*.r>ple. You will find every man anu woman of im- portance with the circus is -the owner of a home some place, or is saving to get one. This spirit makes mem tidy, help ful and particular whan traveling. Coni- minu me Vj a circus man—that is, one of g*,ou standing—for a safe friend, honest citizen and a goo-d fellow every time." tiicx. ncKrtowlcdged that it was tho ) served side and they even buy these exitra-priced places for tho youngsters. The squaws run to the most glaring col ors ln their dress nnd paint their faces in a dozen different colors. They lik n cheap Jewelry nnd loud show* nnd when a crowd of them get together the picture they make is worth going m'es to see. “Along the Pacific coast td*» Chinamen make the circus coming an went. They turn out of their holes, decied in the'r best bib '•1‘ul tucker and quttbusiness as if it hid no Interest for then. In San Francisco fully 25,000 Clihamcn saw one circus inst season. I’ll wager that teachings of the Goldman woman that ns; iron him to accomplish and > ndcr- f'lie his dastardly deed but small pun ishment was bandied out to her. To b© sure she was arrested, but soon released and allowed to continue her vile teach ing-'. Only recently upon the release from rrison, adter serving fourteen years for the attempted assassination of Henry C. Frick, of Alexander Berknian. this Jnn- gero.'s ":cu" and Miss Goldman joined fore s in some sort of an unconventional matrimonial agreement. They do no; be hove in marriage by either Judge. Justice or parson, an! they are now spreading the dlocirlnr© of free love and annrchy yelped like a pack of coyotes when the gramme Bendini girls Jumped from the grouno to “ Prim X , . Trl Rn „, on the back of their galloping thorough-j !lk *‘ a duPk to a ™ p , ' - nkp ^ bred*. The Mexicans liked th© gvmnns I ttlf> h, * : ’ of evoryUhing above par. takes tic acts and onenerl their id4a Iike f pr ^ ]r < ' J marches off to the Huntington a\©nue grounds with a pride and happiness no revival meeting -could ever stimulate. All -the girls don't wear glasses, either, and ; theiri they notice things when parental c>.s| gjfxS COSTLY T0 REdFIENT. arc-turned uipward or backward. „ , _ 1 ‘ Tr K .,,-.1,. terrors ' (From The New York Sun.) "The Harvard hoys ate holy terrors, , , ' , not that thev are had but just act out I Athol, Mass., lias awakened to the fact not that they are mut. om J i.that through accepting a gift thirty years .-iiman nature when a bur n . a I ago it Is much out of pocket, and that lir.gs get together and nre liurs.ing wnn | lt is jj ke ]y to p a y out a still larger hf&lth and good fellowship. If the- bal- j amount of money if Lyman Jennings con- let girls didn't dance two or three times tinues hale and hearty it would 1)0 had policy on ttie part of Thirty years ago when Mr. Jennings the circus management. They like the, was fifty-eight, he had acoumuiated SI0. j girl bareback riders and the trapeze art- ists. They get along well with the clowns, too, provided the clown has good aver age sense and falls in with them without delaying the show. Of course, the Har vard crimson is worn by the girls with out too much display. PENNSYLVANIA A GOOD FIELD. -Ir middle Pennsylvania, where money | and if ids looks like gold and is kept as long as i B P a v her life, the circus does really good work. It gets these pious, close-fisted people away from the hard line of daily routine and sends their blood racing to parts of ti-fir systems that had been numb for j inorrs. I "These strong, saving, wholesome Dutch I types are all right when they are wooed I r.wav by clean, outdoor enjoyment. They INTEREST AX-L MORMONDOM. i mlu- the whole family and act as if the kie.u circ-usgorrs. j n ,or ey spent was an offering without a takes their fancy, string or apology. Their fences and • will line up and stand in the curl- ; oi.-scs arc painted, their fields filled and hot sun an hour before the door [ tho children go to school. Their pleas ures are simple and the money they hoard, after all, is apt to come from cut ting out Ihe silly trimmings of life in the big cities. "The circus man, if he is set up right. In Louisian; Mississippi nnd Alabama the big tent | looks as If it were in mourning. Here! and there a white face looms up During! a show ihe noise and laughter of these! good-natured blacks are almost deafen ing. The clowns are their favorites. ! Strange to say, too, in view of the bad! name tlie negro has for forgetting the! ownership of things ihe likes, he never tries to 'ring in' any of his family on tin- 'under-12' clause. If his children are a day over 12. he Tags without a murmur nnd it is often no small drain on his finances, for lie sometimes heads a procession of youngsters the length of a city lot "The YK lie band lions a r.lwa vs every father lias a cluster I that would crow,; a band | will buy popcorn and lemon-j >f them and show them he' ing opens. And of children chariot- He ado for all likes tilings by bringing his hands to gether until they get red and swollen. Entire families will travel for ICO ami 200 miles to see tlie circus in their coun try. They eonie in wagons over moun tain and valley, and camp out until the show comes. Sometimes they nre a day or even three days ahead. The hill call- ins are empty, so are the mining board- i Ing houses. "The stores close up in the little places I from whioh tills strange stream of poo- ! pie empties. YVhen a show ] was with ! was last in Mount Pleasant. Utah, there ! wore sights that would tickle the hearts j of the mail who tries to get close to ' nature with his brush and pen. Some ot i the people came from as far off ns St. George, a distance of 200 miles, coming i part c.f the way liy wagon and the resi 1 of the way by train. Lots of the people, | after they got to town, didn't have the 1 500 in rash. About that time hard times in business canic and work was d-Uflcuit to obtain; so he thought how he could invest his money so as to make snr© that he and his wife would be comforta ble the rest of their days. The town of Athol was then in debt, and lie offered to give the sum of 19,000 to the town on condition it should pay him an annuity of $540 during his life, wife should survive him that an annuity of $180 aJter his decease, during h^-r life, and that It should pay to each of his three children who should survive him an annuity of $120 after his decease, during their lives. The town eagerly accepted the girt, and in 1876 the $9,000 was turned over to it. A few friends chided Mr. Jen nings for what they termed his foolisn- ness and others told him he had let his heart run away with his head and needed a guardian. The town meeting pass ed a resolution, setting forth that "Mr. Jennings will be held in Athol's last ing remembrance." Mr. Jennings smiled and sail, he wasn't born a yankee for nothing. Every year for thirty years Ylr. Jen nings tins quietly stepped up and receiv ed $540, and at the next payment ths town of Athol will have paid him $16.- 200. or $7,200 more than he gave the town. It has been unnecessary for him to work during all these years. money to get Into the circus, but they saw l half as many passed the do« of the ‘big the 'grand, glittering, gorgeous parade' 1 top' in Portland. Ore. TF*y are not I nnd were happy. mean and buy popcorn or -monade a-s ' "It would do your heart good to sec j TRI-WEEKLY ON THE SPOT SAYS LOUISIANA READER Editor Constitution: Many thanks for the promptness in sending my Tri-Weekly paper. I would really be at a loss without it. It is true you are away over in Georgia, but somehow or other you are right on the spot when it comes to news. C. W. SPENCER, Archer, La.