Newspaper Page Text
For the Hamilton Journal.
M U S I N G S.
NO. 3.
All animated nature is fu ! l ot life
and activity. Spring time has come
.
and with it the songs of the birds, the
opening of the flowers and the hum
of the “bus)- bee.”
1 he bee is a very interesting insect
or animal, as you sre pleased to call
him or her; has many ways of her
own and disturbs nu one if left
undisturbed, out if imposed
upon, fights to the bitter end. The
bee gathers his material from flowers
and shrubs without materially injur
ing their beiuty or strength. When
freighted with his valuable cargo he
hastens without delay to his honey
factory and is unloaded of his burden
by laborers appointed for the purpose
and the proress of manufacture of
honey is begun. Beautiful cells are
already provided for the honey as
prepared; when fit for use is carefully
fuliy covered over and left to mature
by age. How the wax out of which
the cells are made is prepared has
not been ascertained. Bees have a
definite and well understood system
of government. All are workers and
no idleis. Those sometimes called
drones are in fact guards-and defend
their citadels with much bravery. f
one proves lazy and unprofitable he
is tried, sentenced ami executed at
once. The Queen bee is.an absolute
monaich of all and is implicitly ooey
ed. There is but one Queen bee,
and if she sickens or dies the colony
becomes demoralized if another Queen
is not soon supplied. Bee managers
look to this carefully. Bee culture
of late years has become a great in¬
dustry and has been found to be very
profitable. Our common bees have
been much improved by the intro¬
duction of the Italian Queen bee,and
strange to say, they are frequently
sent through the mail. When a new
Queen is introduced it is necessary
to protect her by a fine wire gause
until they get used to her and agree
to recognize her authority; then all
goes on well. Much like men, it will
not do for a colony of bees to get
rich, then they wifi get indolent and
go to nothing. It is necessary to
“rob” them at least twice a year and
much more frequently in a regular
apiary. The mode of “robbing” is
various, but modern improvements
tuake the “gum” in sections and a
section can be withdrawn without
disturbing the bee. Bees get to know
their owner and will submit to him
when they would attack a stranger.
Bee keepers use an lugemous little
machine tu unrap the honey comb
and take the honey, When thus
taken and put ark the bees go at
once to filling up. Nature is won
considerate of the wants of
man. Not only crowns his industry
with success, but makes animals and
insects contribute thereto.
O. P. T.
For the Hanrlton Journal.
THIRD PARTY.
Mr. Editor:—I n your issue of the
j oURNAL Q f t| ie 20 fh you rightly and
t w isely say: “Revs. Small & Jones,
in their party movement, occupy the
Atlanta Constitution’s internal rev
enue pjatforn, but they have no hopes
Q f runn j n g president Cleveland on
^ »
The silly effort of Rev. Sam Small
and a few others to get up a third par
I ty clearly shows the cloven foot, is
| unwise and fraught with dangerous
consequences. Prohibition and the
temperance cause must not go into
the muddy pool of politics; if so, the
cause is ruined. Prohibition is not
a political question but purely amor¬
al one. It must not be jeopardized
by mixing with it party issues. The
prize at stake is too great—too im¬
portant. It stands on its own merits
and is to be measured by the tem¬
poral and eternal welfare of men.
It is true friends will not load it down
with thousands of questions of more
! policy and as to who shall ride m
: to office by the votes of its advo
! cates. Let every good citizen vote
for prohibition and when other issues
| are presented vote as his judgment
may dictate. This third party move
ment is a shrewed trick of the enemy
and is the “wooden horse” in disguise
and is really meant to attack the cit¬
adel of democracy. But the effort
is so lame that few, if any, will be de¬
ceived by it. The solid South, to all
sensible |and thoughtful men, is the
great break water aga nst the heavy
tide of wrong and oppression of the
present and the past and the only
hope of relief is the success of the
democratic party. Why attempt to
jeopardize this success in the critical
year of presidential election. Surely
some selfish purpose underlies the
movement and somebody wants
the noteriety (not honor) of bei»,g
nominated for office. “Oh shame,
where is thy blush;” descend from
the pulpit to the husting to scramble
for place a little short-lived noteriely
at the sacrifice of the best interest of
the country. Surely the intelligence
of this great state of Georgia will dis¬
courage and discountenance all effort
in this direction. Let prohibition
stand on ns own merits without the
of . leaders , and ,
wh p ann Sj»ur party
s o .er u. I .ter it will prevail. But
the true merits of the questions is
mixed up with office and aspirant
n.en the day of success is
postponed.
Prohibitionist.
MYSTERIOUS FATALITIES.
What Is it Th«t i« Killing so Msnjr
Prominent Men.
The death of Kaiser Wilhelm, ex
Gov. Hoffman, Banker J. W. Drexel,
Lieu*. -Gov. Dorsheimcr, Dr. Carpen- '
Chief-Justice f T ... Waite . and - Genl. .
ter,
B. H. Brewster, in quick succession.*
and all from I he same cause, although
having different names, is startling.
March w and April fatal , months, .
are
not :>nly for consumptives but also
for many diseases more disguised
but none the less fatal,
Gov. Hoffman had heart disease. !
Gov. Dorsheimer, apparently a
srtong, well, robust man,over six feet
high, sickens and dies in four days,
of pneumonia
Chief Justice Waite meets the
same fate and he was apparently the
personification of vigor. !
Drexel, the Philadelphia banker,
and Brewster, Ex Atty. Genl., were
suddenly cut off in the midst cf great
usefulness, by Bright’s disease, and
Dr. Carpenter, the well-known New
York physician, suddenly died of
Kidney disease, having .
never sus
pected that he was at all troubled
therewith !
This reminds us of the case of Dr.
Frank Hawthorn, of New Or eans.
He was lecturing before the Louisi¬
ana university on tne peculiarly de¬
ceptive character of Kidney disease
and the methods of microscopical
and chemical test.
After having shown specimen after
rpecimen of disease fluids, and made
very clear the point that kidney dis¬
ease may exist without the knowl
edge or suspicion of the patient or
practitioner, with giacious self-confi¬
dence he remarked. “Now gentlemen,
let me show you thr healthy water of
a stiong, well man.
He He staggers applies the j test! J
“Gentlemen, I have made a tern j
,
blc discovery! “he gasps,” I myself •
have the fatal Bright s disease! ,
In less than a year this specialist,
of the commonest and most fatal of
disease was dead. He was a victim
of advanced Kidney disease the pres
ence of which in himself he had nev
er suspected !
L B PRICE, M. P.. a Reutle.uan and
phyMciHii of ihe highest RtnodiDg of
Hanover O. H., V»four yearn ago,
hfter tryiux every other remedy for
brivht H diseane, including famona .
min-rai wnt*-, «-owcI t. y
W»rn»r‘« 8»fe Cure, «d 1 Mxroh 24.
1888, wrote: “I have never find the
nlight» st synipto* h of uay old fenrfol
Mr. JOHN DOHERTY, of Corncord »
! 54 H., wa* given up with blight’* di* j
. 1879.
e*8« by 1 be beat pfaywcUns in
He w*h in » dreadful etat*. After u-*- j
lDg and being cured in 1881 by V\ar- ,
neT 4 ? Safe Cure, in 1887, be wrote, 4 *I
JOHNOOLEMANr&q . i<» flr*t Or, taken go,y
Hi., New HhveD, Conn , was
r b ; n d :
rhenrotf iftm «nd all the other deceptive*
signs of kidney disesse* The beet
in N«w H van cold do noth¬
ing for him. He then began using
Warner* H*fe Cure*. 21KJ bottles of
Which he an I his family have need and
be i* wired
w. T. CHaWFOBD. pn pre eor Ht.
Otaurla* Hotel, R chmoud Va , and well
known all ibrongh the booth, several
kidney year* »^o » as in the death-agony bright* from
disease, oouvnlaion* and
ciaUsM 0 «i?h d^^eapiononn^Tdm
practicdly thing Hse d-»«d and inenrab'e. Every
f«iling. he took Warners
Snfe Core Hhandantly and regularly,
nntil full restored to health, and now
be say*, After a lapse of many years l
am «h wont d as a dollar, with no symp¬
toms of my old trouble I owe my
to Wmraer s * fe ^ nre *
Kidne r discase is the most decc P’
. ^ universal, the
t ‘ ve * l e most most
^ ata * disease.
^ the mosl ^ carnct * men cannot
koow without t,le use of mlcrosco P
,cal and chemical tests that they
have k,dne > r d ‘ sease - how m “ cb "> ore
hable 15 the la J ,man to be - unkn °wn
to hlmself ’ ln the ver T ) aws of dealh -
who does feel as wel1 “ formerly,
but who does no * think an * ,h,n 8 *P«
clall y a,ls hinl - and whose P b r*>cian
ma Y assure h,m lhat he wl " 50on be
“ill riffht ® * ”
In theseda ' rs P eo P le r ' c0 « mze tbat
> s w * ser t0 P rcvent disease than
10 await i,s arrival t0 cure it When
know that be . in the
you you may
greatest peril and not any idea of the
fact from any defined set of ill feel¬
ings, the wisest course to pursue is to
follow the council and experience
above outlined, and thoroughly reno¬
vate the system, cleanse the blood,
tone the nerves and insure your own
life against these common, mysteri¬
ous fatalities. .
SOCIAL PURITY.
Lecture by Xf lee France* E. Willard
at Metropolitan Ml* K* t'bnreb,
March IS, If MU.
It is often said that “Marriage is
^ episode to man, an event to worn
an> ” [> u t it is as much an event to
mam as lQ woman It ig thc , eav . n
q( ^ qt wQe
^| an y tiavel life alone, sometimes
^ re *son of duty to be bravely
somctime s for sorrow silently
cndurc(J Washington Jong's loss
sweetest memory of
^j s jjf c> an( j w h Q un sa y that some
women are not left childless that a
nation may call them mother.
These are sometimes discords .n
the chimes of these marriage bells, as
may see by the . records , of fM the po
you
j| cc cour t s We must plead with the
people to throw additional safeguards
around the homes of the nation. We
believe that the time is not far dis
ta»t when the Christian idea of home
shall be realized.
Nearly twenty years ago Mrs Jose
phine Butler first uttered her thoughts
on t h c g rcat question of social purity,
I —“> «*