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THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PRINCIPLE: “EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL MEN AND SPECIAL PRIVILEGES TO NONE/ 7
eyoted TO
rjX, ?Tumber 24
EETOND THE SUNSET.
I ft t p.,s«ecl his father’s door
I°Y v I treiched vales on of forevermore; tangled grass,
■^Yinfstv raat mountain pass,
fc^'Vonders I' iYauliands unexpressed of the west,
fch lU - the lanes mighty ai-d sun cities goes of down. renown,
■
the the
Kid, left his father’s door
L return more. „
will no
Ivel. ,1 forth beyond the bridge,
r Rpdthe , , ; . ] 0 |ty mountain ridge,
fl liver and the town
out Um re the sun went down;
L e -1 h fink at close of da},
Lwset .
MI! was faraway.
L Ary tJurmoh many mixed a wind-swept with men, glen
I towns he breeze
Le-rU of many an alien
blli ra o’er unfamdar seas, that bloves
►rathe- f i the spicy gale
fj! southern archipelagoes.
1 palm
pt svw-t sleep beneath the
Lon Uet he looked far at close of day,
still was away.
0U! o-jit to leave bis father’s door
•avel on forevermore.
[iiered liis uniannlar pilgrim, beat way, and gray.
pn [versed in lands, man of men
a
iversal Lie;! citizen. earth:
all the once more
bod before his father’s rloor
felimany years his father slept
L [oed k mountain side unwept- brown
there wrinkled, wornand
Cod there as the sun went down,
h the twilight dim and gray
jjUDset was not faraway.
ran Le many millions hurled
i.'kdown weary of the world,
je all beside his tried hi.-“father’s journey o’er door,
bid, a sad smile on his now.” brow,
gs beyond the sun-et
—[S. W. Toss in Yankee Blade.
Tramp Printer's Pipe.
p you ever, gentle reader, stand
lo face with tramp printer’s pipe?
lour delicate, pink-tinted nostrils
Inhale the plainspoken aroma that
p about the instrument with
P a tourist type sticker consumes
|eai s tobacco crop? Have you
pod f and yor hair lifted, your lungs
your soul stirred by the
|ss pared referred to do to? battle If not, you are
with the
and reverses which are sura to
m J ou r pathway through this
f tears. Until you have stood
! P re sence of the great power,
* hands with it, so to speak. you
rm a slight conception of
filiations that cast their shad
< the sanctum of a country
f [mannered Ce u P on a hme a meek and
[f man was the main
the bugle, a modern n^wspa
pbliehecl b and had in the interior Of this
printer an experience with a
L and his pipe, so, 1 terri
mture, that it still lives in
' e m ' a ® though it chanced but
.
.fie said he cam<i> from
)l y anc * his arrival at tli office
Mantes :
after a way freigha train
passed through the village*
suspicion caus
that had utilized L that
moving medium of transpferta
C make the ejomney. i WheJthis
silence was su gg<*ted to hi J he
u “■pUoJmae a ,
-‘“le that but
• smoke ' through the clkiud of
that cur led from be
emreied lip ween
cn
* Fe.sene 0> f that
0 pipe* nj was
feted m every nook
T and Y «rner
came like a I Tank-
6 ®*tstoi»„i and
...rr of ike Pri me stile or funny
-
GCeA!S( M of
’ for a gab! ' roof fend a
1 '• m»d
mate uarnr
j
' i! tiiig 1 i lV e
.
m -Vrcauia th-.
on her
Vi-ailing length Ti wag some -
ne owner
was re~
, Vjr u " m his pocjjfet. He
^ e was helpless.
Bmp 0U j. upon hi
case and
Conyers, Georgia, Saturday, July 18, 1891-
scratch type in his eyes, in spite of
him. He sewed it in with wax-end,
but it broke loose, dragging the lin -
ing of his coat with it. It stood up
in the forms and pied a half column
nonpareil. This roused the fore¬
man’s ire and he set it to work carry¬
ing coal from ike street to a bin at
the top of a stairway. It packed up
two tones in less than an hour, to the
intense delight of the office boy, who
held his nose between his thumb and
forefinger and followed it about to
see that the coal was not deposited
too far from the stove.
That pipe was subdued only when
its master held it between his lips and
blew sparks out of its gothic chimney.
Then it seemed to fall asleep, and
would wheeze and rattle like a
coffee mill grinding on a pebble. At
night it was put in the paper cutter,
with the blade screwed down tight
upon its throat. In the morning it
wonld be found throwing kegs of ink
out of a rear window, or dragging a
Gordon jobber about the press room.
11 was never quite except under its
master’s magic spell. Everybody in
the office ate sassafras, and the floor
was kept sprinkled with violet water.
Finally the fort man bethought himself
to soak it in a gallon of lye aud the en¬
tire office force gathered around to
watch the battle. In five minutes it
bad swallowed the contents of the
kettle, and stood up and begged for
more. This was too much. The
owner was told that one or both must
go. He was a good printer, but his
pipe w as too much like Samson. He
took his sentence meekly, said it was
the same everywhere he went, but he
couldn’t bear to be seperated from
his meerschaum, which was a present
from his first wife’s mother. After
the pair had gone the office windows
were raised and the force put on sack¬
cloth and ashes and chloride of lime.
—Detroit Free Press,
SPECIMEN CASES.
S. FT. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis.
was troubled v.i;k Neuralgia aud
Rheumatism, his stomach was dis¬
ordered, his liver was affected to an
alarming degree, appetite fell away,
and he was terribly reduced in flesh
and strength. Three bottles of
Electric Bitters cured bim.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, Ill.
had a running sore on bis leg of
eight years standing. Used three
bottles of Electric Bitters and seven
boxes ot Bucklen’s Arnica Salve,
and his leg is sound and well. John
Speaker. Catawba, O., bad five large
Fever sores on his leg, doctors said
he was incureable. One bottle ol
Eietric Bitters and one box Buekien’s
Arn ; ea Saive cured him entirely.
Sold by Dr, W. H. Lee & Son.
AN OLD MAN GETS IN LOVE.
Adam Stuart was born in 1800.
He has amassed property worth $30,
000. Four years ago his wife died.
Last spring he saw Miss Emily Kan
ter, 22 years old a pretty brunette, and
was at once struck by 7 her charms.
He secured an introduction and
since then has pestered her sadly
He proposed to her early in June but
she spurned his offer. The old man
offered to deed her all his property
and told her he could not live long.
She refused this offer also. Stuart
went home and tried to hang himself,
He was cut down but tiled again,
A council of doctors decided him help
lessly insane and he was sent to
asylum.
The A ge to M eel.
Accepted authority states that as
nations advance the approved age
for a woman to marry becomes pro¬
portionately older, and cites instan¬
ces of barbarous nations where the
girls are married when they are
mere children. In these halcyon
days of the nineteenth century
another mark of progress is the fact
that the age when a woman becomes
an old maid is no longer 25, but a
decade later, 35. II may be that
the maidens themselves have re¬
moved that significant mile-stone
but, at any rate, some one in a pop¬
ular publication is responsible for
the notice that such removal has
been made.
But suppose, after thirty years of
a life filled with good and happy
times, a woman finally finds one
man, the likes of whom she has nev¬
er met before. He is mature, like
herself; bis character is formed, and
she knows to a reasonable extent
the man she decides to marry She
gives up maidenhood with a strug¬
gle, but she understands and rea¬
lizes what she is doing. She believ¬
ed in her fiance and respects him
profoundly; she has had evidence
that tbier tastes are harmonious,
and that neiher one is a “mental
beggar.” When such a state of
th ings exists a woman runs less risks
i n what is, afl-et ail’s said and done,
but one grand experiment.
Suppose the experiment proves
happy aud withal successful, then
it is as it was originally designed.
Suppose, on the other hand, it is
disastrous, there are fewer years
left in a woman’s life in which to
live out her mistake. She has lost
nothing by wanting. There is a
goodly amount of sound sense in the
oft-repeated saying of the old Irish
house keeper: “Betther be sbure
than sorry.”
There is a grod deal of silly talk
about a woman’s being phlegmatic,
incapable of loving at 25 or 30, as
she was at 16 to 20.
That’s all nonsense. As a woman
matures in grace of mind and body,
just so much more deeply will she
love. Her love at 30 is worth a
hundred (old more to the one who
wins it than when she is at the the
uncertain age of 20.
Many urge early marriage on the
ground that the husband and wife
grow into each other’s ways more
easily, and thus live more harmoni¬
ously.
There are many natures which
could Dover adapt themselvs to each
other, no matter when they 7 were
brought together, and those two peo¬
ple who marry make a mistake fatal
to tbier happiness, if they are not
sensible enough and reasonable
enough, and can so supplement each
other that they can marry at 40 as
well as at 20.—Washington Post.
NOW TRY THIS
It will cost you nothing and will
surely 7 do you good, if you have a
Cou ' Co ja, trouble with
gb) or any
Throat, Chest, or Lungs. Dr. Kings
Kew Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds is guaranteed
t0 gj V e relief, or money will be paid
bags. Sufferers from La Grippe
found itjust. the king and under its
use had a speedy and perfect recov.
cry. Try a sample bottle at ouj
expense and learn for yourself just
how good a thing it is, Tri a '
bottles free at Dr. W. H. Lee & son s
Drug Store, Large size 50c. and
$1.00.
GERONOtO, THE DES¬
PERADO.
THE TRAGIC FATE OF THIS NOTORIOUS
DAREDEVIL OF ARIZONA.
Arizona has had a good many dar¬
ing horse thieves aud desperadoes,
but it is doubtful whether a more
thorough daredevil ever infested the
territory than the Mexican renegade
known as Geronimo, who was killed
by a sheriff’s posse a few 7 days ago
while he w$3 trying to run of a stolen
horse. This fellow, whose real name
was Santiago Moreno, was scarcely
more than a boy, yet, like Curly Bill,
so great was his nerve, skill and en¬
durance, that for several years he had
been the terror of southern Arizona.
He had stolen hundreds of head of
choice stock, which he had run into
old Mexico, had committed several
stage and train robberies, and had
killed more than one man. Rewards
amounting to more than $4,000 were
on his head. The following is the
Tucson Star’s graphic story of the
chase and shooting of the desperado:
“In going from Pantano to Total
Wreck, Ed Vail met three Mexicans
two on horseback and the other on
foot, carrying a saddle and bridle.
On being questioned they could not
satisfactorily account for their posses¬
sion. Vail’s suspicions being aroused
he made inquiries further up the road
and ascertained that the saddle aud
bridle had been stolen from a couple
of Mexicans who w r ere working in the
vicinity, and shortly after he was in¬
formed that three Mexicans had taken
a horse belonging to M. J. Jones
from the Sanford pasture. Vail tele¬
phoned immediately to Pantano,
where a posse, including Tom Turner,
J. M. Orosco, Logan and some others
was quickly organized for the pur¬
suit.
“The posse struck the trail near
Pantano and followed it in the direct
tion of the San Pedro river until dark¬
ness compelled them to stop. Orosco
and Logan pushed on toward the river
to arouse the settlers, and the other
men went back to the rodeo at Panta¬
no. The robbers went straight to the
river, arriving at one of Henry's
ranches below Ties Alamos just at
dusk. Here tliey remained all night
in one of the vacant houses. Food
was given them, and they turned
their horses into the pasture. All
the horses were so thoroughly fagged
out, especially the stolen animal, that
the Mexicans were unable to get star
ted before 9 o’clock in the morning.
“Meanwhile a party consisting of
Bob Hughes, Deputy Sheriff Gray, J.
M. Orosco, Logan, Gibson, Sum
Boone aud Morgan, well armed with
repeating rifles and pistols, had struck
the trail near Tres Alamos, arriving
at Henry’s just two hours after the
robbers had left. A hot chase then
began, and the robbers were overtaken
at about 2 o’clock near Rabell’s ranch,
about twenty miles farther down the
river. The pursuing party got with¬
in seventy yards of the Mexicans be¬
fore their presence was suspected.
Immediately on perceiving Hughes
and Boone, who were in advance, the
robbers disclosed their indentity by
opening fire. A regular fusilade en¬
sued, in which some twenty shots
were exchanged,
“At the first shot Leon, who is
said to have U i u one of Slaughter’s
deputies, sprang from his horse,
kneeled and threw up his hands. The
leading Mexican fired three times, as
his pistol shows, before receiving his
death wound. As he fell to the
Price per Year, 8 LOO
ground Leon .exclaimed: ‘Geronimo is
no more,’ and only then did the party
know they had run down the notori¬
ous Geronimo, mail and train robber,
murderer and horse thief. The third
man fired five shots before he was
disabled by a ball through the fleshy
part of the thigh. While the atten¬
tion of the posse was directed to
Geronimo, this man, who answers to
the name of Victoriauo, managed to
crowl away and secrete himself in the
thick brush.
“Many settlers had been attracted
to the spot by the shooting, and it
was some time before his hiding place
could be found There were two
pistols found on the Mexicans, Geroni¬
mo having the regular navy Colt’s and
Yictoriano an old stylo Remington.
Geronimo only lived a few minutes
after receiving tiie fatal shot. Ho
did not speak, but smiled as he ex¬
pired.
“The dead man and prisoners were
taken to Benson that night. Alter a
preliminary examination on Sunday
the prisoners were taken to Tomb¬
stone on the next day by Deputy
Sheriff A. IN. Gray. Geronimo’s re¬
mains await farther identification in
Benson. He was a young looking
Mexican, apparen iy 25 years of age,
but probably older, medium height
and build, and smooth face, with the
exception of a slight boyish moust¬
ache. According to Leon his true
name is Santiago Moreno. He is
credited with robbing several stages,
the Sonora train robbery and the kill¬
ing of Harvey Katz and Soto some
five years ago. - ’
WHAT IT DOES.
IIood’d SnI'sapar;!i u
1. Purifies the blood.
2. Creates an appetite.
3. Strengthens the nerves.
4. Makes the weak strong.
5. Overcomes that tired feeling.
6. Cures scrofula, salt rheum, etc.
7. Invigorates the kidneys and
liver.
8. Relieves headache, indigestion
dyspepsi a.
SHE GOES TO A CONVENT.
Etta Branchton a girl who has been
at the King's Daughters’ hospital
since April was sent to St Celia’s Con¬
vent Ivashingtan, D. C, this morning.
She was a reformed girl and it was
her request to be sent to Cue convent.
It will be j-ememmembered that she
was on her way from Texas to Wash¬
ington last March when sis uccidanfc*
ally met her lover iu A rri.a He
persuaded her to remain ovei >ue train
She consented trusting imu fully.
They drank v ino too freely and she
fell. Etta lived with him *’or a short
while was deserted and the King's
Daughters teok her in charge.
The Branchton family live in Texas
and are wealthy.
Jesse Vaughn a young farm erliving
near Milan ia Sumpter county was re¬
turning home Irom a blind t.ger Fri¬
day evening when his home became
frightened aud rvgau fy kick Vaughn
was kicked under the chin an . instant¬
ly killed.
-Now that tue commence i. sea
son is happily over ac t the last
essay has been read l he •• a be
no cruelty but much ksadness in
cubing the attention of t weet
~ i uduatCs tot .e ia>. - U d- a man
sneo for breicft of promise in I tidi
son, sets up as uiddi feno* l ; ’ plea
tea. ib/ rn d-leu con hi neither milk
* cow m•:nt. build.—CulCUgO