Newspaper Page Text
Much attention bus been attracted by tba
flEifniOLlHHflUEB
>«™iS,CflEARRH
HEADACHE'S^
fZ&StttJts&sait
botion ol booke to advertise their lowbi fal
aewtrainsyrnmalngfrore NotT
*■*»{»** U «ud »o be tht
£2? , .™,^Ei2!3 t l S tMiw W appointed
train ever constructed. The train consiata of
a composite oar, in which is embraced a barber
abop, bath room, library, cafe and smoking
parlor, a dining car, In which meals are served
at all boat a, day or night. —„Tr._— rTeq
only for what they order, aSo^jujJcompSJ!
mentcf Pullman’s lataUjaod most —tnrfKint
<Umwing-room sleeping cars. The speed of
this railway wonder, covering the vast dia-
taMe between New Orleans and Loa Angelo*
in 60 hours, and to San Francisco is Whoara
bas never been attempted or equaled. Con.
trniy to the usual practice of other great
"V “SS wi “ SL.‘*^TdSar
Scrofula on His Head
STRELT car schedule.
First ear leavee Ball Park at T a. as.
First car leaves FoawoOee at 7.M a. at.
Fust ear leaves Baxter street at 741 a. m. ■*
Leaves Foet-offlce five minutes, twenty.fi
ikatat and forty-Ase miaatea after the boi
Leave Ball park on the hoar, twenty mlnut
nd forty salnntea after tbohoor. -
Leave JClUedge and Baxter streets one ml
health inUalifornia.
«sSir^. , 5r!s2rs&%
different bnee of Weetem (ravel; and ita m
shown thair «xpb Unt fw«* _ 9
Hood’s r®* Cures
Made only toy
N. K. FAIRBANK & CO.,
CHICAGO and ST. LOUIS.
Cheapest Book
liet alUaooan in tb South have fared
better. Populism bas bad its liule day.
MOTHERS,
| Batemans Drops, Ooi
Do You Know
Taking advantage of the
yival of interest in the Gri
Tb* Crnturv will print ti
Pa Ton Know that yon Should not permit any inertirinn to be given your child
mdem you or your physician know of vrhst it is composed f
Do Yon Know that Caetoda is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list, of
Ua ingredients t* published with eaery bottle f _
Do Tow Know that Oastoria la the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel riteber.
That It baa been la use for nearly thirty years, and that more Caatoria ie now sold than
of all other remedies for children oomMnedt
Do Yon Know that the Potent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have tamed exetastoe right to Dr. Pitcher and Us assigns to use the word
-* cj&'" ’
. r- ••
ft
’zrw^mmmr
The Athens Daily Banner.
Published Dolly, Semi-Weekly and Sunday by
PBIH1ZT * UPSON.
ft.O. UPSON Managing Editor
V. H. FHIKUY AND E. 8. OPSON.I
Managers.
0THE ATHENS DAILY UANNKBisdelivered
by carriers in the city, or mailed,
to any address M the follo r
year, #2.50foraUmonr '
The Weekly or mind*.
to cents lor u months. Invariably cash In ad
vance.
Transient advertisemenis win be Inserted at
tha i ate of 11.00 per square lor the first Insertion,
sad 50 oenta for each subsequent insertion, ex
cept contract advertisements, on which special
rates can be obtained.
Local notices will bo charged at the rate of 10
cents per line each Insertion, except when con
tracts for extended periods, when special raw.*
will be mads.
KemitUDces may ba made by express, postal
ante, money order or registered letter.
All bn-mess communications should be ad-
dreeaed to the Bustnosa Manager.
Subscriber* are requested to prompt-
ly notify the business offioe of late de
livery, failure to carry papers to porch*
ea or failure to deliver with absolute
rsgularlty on the part of tbs carriers.
Such Lotifioation u the only means ol
knowing of the existenoe of any cause
for complaint and will be appreciated
accordingly.
neVEBHOB WAITS.
Instead of riding through blood op to
the bridle bits, Ie now trying very hard
to crawl from under tbeanow-bank of
"defeat, which his opponents shoved
him under el the polls lest Tuesday.
No democrat Is aorry to hear of repub
lican success in Colorado, for it means
that the citizens of that stats intend to
relegate into oblivian that errzy sooial-
ist and populist governor they bad
thoughtlessly elected daring the shore
lived period of the wove of populism
ss sjnonomoui with, popular reform.
The experiment not only proved a
failure, but was exosssively expensive,
it caused property to shrink in values
to the amount of million* .of dollars
under the administration of Waite, who
was pointed at with the dager of scorn,
as a nihilist, socialist and a fanatic.
When such a man is defeated even If it
means tbe aasension of our strongest
enemy, democrats rejoice in tbe result
and willingly send to the state of
Colorado thier^ heartiest congratula
tions.
88
| A Banner
a . , I
|Adv.
I Will do It.
The honest people of all parties are dis
gusted with ita silly vagariee and the
common sense of the public haa asserted
itself. The parting with Populism
calls for na tears.-Phil* Times.
CUBK FOAt a KAO ACHE.
As n remedy for all forme of Head
ache Electric Bitten has proved to be
tbe v ery beet. It effects a permanent
cure and the most dreadful habitual
sick headaches yield to its influence.
We urge all who are afflicted to procure
bottle, and give this remedy a fair
trial.. Jo cases of habitual constipation
Electric Bitttra cures by giving tbe
needed tone to the bowels, and few cases
long resist the use of this medicine. Try
once. Large bottles only 90c at Pal
mer A Kinnsbrew’s and John Crawford
A Co.
GEO. C. THOMAS.
Bas moved bis Law offioe up on Clay
ton street. Over the store of J. J. C.
McMahan.
& No business man
cun afford to see tinn
away with
'9S.
passing
out being put, to
>53
||j fulRvalue.'He shoul(
& endeavor to do some-,
jgj
££> thing each hour that
j||* will bring up his
,rade and increase the
profits.
Ik A Banner adver-
s«
SSI tisei.ient will do the
gjg|
gjg work. Not only will
it bring customers
||j daily, but every hour
seek new ones for the
jjj|j coming day.
vcizcaz/scaxaxte
IS LIEINU A eTKABI.SC DISEASE?
Two Chicago physicians claim to have
a St. Louis patient who has put himself
under their charge to be treated for
lieing. He says that he has an uncon-
trolable mania for fabrioatiun, and he
regards himself as suffering from a dis
ease which requires medioal attention.
Tbe two physicians are represented as
agreeing with him in tbe opinion that
he is lbe victim of a disease and, it is
announced, will soon perform an opera
tion on him for the purpose of curing
his mendaoiouaness. Tbe portion of
his anatomy which is to be operated
upon is not stated, bnt that would prob
ably be determined by tbe severity of
tbe disease. An ordinary liar might
possibly by simply cutting off his
tongue, but the only way to care the
campaign liar would be to cut off his
bead. This method of cure would largely
dimish the population and deprive
political campaigns of much of their
accustomed color and romance, bnt
truth, which is so ofteu crushed to
earth under present conditions, would
enjoy tbe novel experience of not be
ing jumped on and mangled several
thousand times every day. And yet
what dull, solemn, uninteresting af
fairs outof political oontests would
Dr. Price’s uum tuucuig • _ .vder
Wsrti's Fair MlEk—s Medal rad Dtelnma
NOTICE,
All persons who have ajiart of,an nn-
expired subscription or advertisement
running over into September, will
please settle for same when due at tbe
Bannbb offioe.
Pbinizy 6 Upson.
And thou too, Texas!
The Atlanta Journal says: !‘We
feared a landslide bvt we never vxpec
ted Stone mountain to fall on ns.”
Accounts of negroes outraging white
women are on the inorease, but along
with them go the stories of lynching
beea.
If all other states should forsake Dc
tnocraey, old Georgia would atill ans
wer, “Here,” at the Democratic roll
call.
The changes of securing an .appro
priation for tbe State Normal School
at this season of the legislature are
brightening.
Judging from the election returns
from tbe heretofore Populistic states
out West, one must oome to the conclu
sion that tbe buy-um-np-all party got
lost in tbe shuffle Tuesday.
If the Republican party is going to
act so hoggish in taking everything,
we move that hereafter the Democrats
refuse to play any more with them.
It aint fair, thats what it mint 1
“Athens is all right,” said Mr. T. W
Reed, who waa for a long time editor of
The Athena Banner. Mr. Reed waa
talking about the timeaandhow tbe
south stood them. «I really believe,”
be went on to say, “that tbe cities of
Georgia have stood the hard times bet
ter than the town* of any other state in
the Union. I know that Athens, even
with many adversities to meet, bas
bridged tbe two years of financial panics
and ia today a prosperous and typical
city of the new aoutfa. Athena is
town that haa a peculiar hutoiy. It
haa for mazy yean been regarded as
the Classic City of the State and atill
haa.tbe epithet, but aside from this, the
own has gained a name for being
plueky and thrifty, and tbe old time
sleepy days of tha past have given way
to.$he wide-awake days of tbe present
in a marked manner. This, too, with
out sacrificing any of that old-time
spirit of southern aristocracy which is
aoondition that has not obtained In
half of the towns of the new south that
have awakened beneath the touch of
industrial and material development.
You can safely bezk on it that Athens
will for a long time yet to oomr, be one
of tbe most solid cities in all Georgia.'*
be
without the audacious charm and flavor
which tbe campaign liar gives to them
We do not believe the Chicago phj
eicans can cure lieing, even with tbe ex
tended experience and special opportu
nities for study of tbe subject which
their residence in that city haa given
them. It ia too large a job even for
Chicago experts. But if they insist
on attempting tbe cure of all other
kinds of liars, it is to be hoped tbat
they will deprive ue of tbe campaign
liar. Hia care ia impossible except by
blotting him out, and hia removal would
deprive us of tbe most picturesque and
enlivening figure in the political arena
He really hurts nobody, for nobody
takes him seriously, and » campaign
without him would be as slow as Pbilt
delpbia, and as dry aa Maine under
Neal Dow.—Baltimore Sun.
porcusn kkpuoiatkd.
While Republicans are jubilant and
Democrats depreaaed, there is one re
sult of the eleotiou over which Republi
cans and Democrats alike ean rejoice
and that ia the overthrow of Popull
Waite, of Colorado, and Lewelling
of Kansas, two of the most blatant dt
msgogueaever clothed, with a little
brief, authority, are overwhelmingly de
feated by tbelr Republican opponents,
and the halls of Congress will echo no
more to the oratory of Simpson and
Pence. Coxcism and Pelleriam and
the whole list of iams that may be prop
erly classed under the term Populism,
have received notice to quit and not
stand upon the order of their going.
It waa unfortunate that the voters
of Illinois were not given a chance
get at Atgeld, but the Republican cy-
clone in tbat Stats may be accepted
an infallable indication of what would
have been done if Atgeld had been
candidate. Tbe only places where
Populism will survive to plague anyone
in the immediate future are South Caro
lina and tbe United State* Senate. Till
man still controls South Carolina and
ir likely to get himself eleoted to
Senate to join the little band of windy
cranks tbat hold the balanoe of power
in that body. So far as having any in
fluence upon popular opinion or
legislation of the country, Populism
of the past, and its few survivors
public place will simply beoome objects
of curiosity to those who are in search
of freaks.
The emphatic overthrow of Populism
will doubtless have wholesome lesion
for both the Republican and Dtmc
cratio parties in the sections where
either is tempted for partisan gain
play fast and loom with PdpuUat
vagaries. The sixteen to one free
ver declaration of the Ohio Democrats
seems to have bnrled them under ama-
Jonty for their opponents of a stxteaa
to one ratio, and the Bepublica»-Popu-
Hamlet would cot have been so out
spoken in bis eoliloquoy, bad be been
smoking one of those Lopes Y Lopez
cigars. For eale at O'Farrell’a cigar
store.
JAME8 YOUNG.
It was nnfortnoate for the theatre
goers of Athena, that two first class
entei tainmenta should have made
simultaneous appearance in oar city
last night, and as the Harvard quartette
played under the auspices of the Y. M
C. A. they necessarily drew much the
larger audience to their entertainment.
However those persons who wit nested
Hamlet last night were highly pi sated
witb the clever acting of James Y rung,
Although quite young he bas a deep
modulated voice and hit delineation of
hia study, was upon as high a grade of
excellence, as one would naturally ex
pect to see, after reading the praises,
that the critics have given him in their
press comments in tbe cities he has
visited, jj-adk* w- - ~ .
GIVING ODDS ON 'VARSITY.
Sty! I will bet you a box of oigara
tbat the ’Vanity team beats Wafford
college today! What odda will you
give me? I will bet you a box of
oigara from O’Farrell’s cigar store,
against cigars bought from any other
house in town. Its a go That* good
odds!
LOWEST PRICES! BEST COAL!
NewSoddy $4.15 and $4.35; Jelico
$4.55 and $1.65; Paint Rock $4.75.
Athens GAb Light Co.
Jisrvan, who has
in tho world with
self amt tho college,
Bcvirly Farms to inte
ou his birthday. The
a geutleuuui, was a little
was committing what would be a
unwelcome impertinence, but there
no way out of it, except by a way which
also Iwl out of his situation. So bo went
witli fear and trembling. He found the
doctor os gracious as could be, and when
the interview was over the autocrat
himself ilroqp the young man down to
the station, chatting pleasantly all the
way.
At the station there was some tyu
to wait, atid Dr. Holmes, with a twinkl,
in his eye, suggested that he and the
young journalist go over to.tho store and
be weighed. The young man was very
nearly of the same height and build as
tbe doctor, but at the time was in rather
poor health. Dr. Holmes made the jour
nalist get ou the scales first. He weigh
ed exactly ISO pounds Thun Dr. Holmes
himself got ou and tipped the beam at
140 ttnd was very much pleased. It was
plain enough that -bo had ‘ (sized up”
tbe young man as about of his own pro
portions and had guessed that he could
outweigh him, and it had tickled his
fancy to find himself at the age of 80 a
“better man” than the youth.—Boston
Transcript.
All subscribers to The
Athens Banner, who deisire to
continue their subscription
will please call at The Ban
ner office and pay for same.
Phinizy Upson.
JfUTIH* n« LV kX'i
CITY ATTORNEY.
Oflice at Citv Flail.
— CENTURY
Lunatics on a Concert Tonr.
The financial difficulties in which so
many of the European governments are
at present involved are leading to the
development of much ingenuity and re
sourcefulness in raising the necessary
“wind,” not only at headquarters in
tbe capital, bnt also iu the provinces.
Thus from Spain we hear of the keepers
of the State Lunatic asylum at Alicante,
having found themselves without funds
and unable to secure any remittances
from Madrid, starting off with their
lunatics on a concert tour, by means of
which they were able to keep going the
establishment intrusted to their charge.
We have heard before of musical at
homes and theatrical entertainments
given by the.inmates of insane asylums,
but never of concert tours undertaken
by a large company of idiots, imbeciles
and raving maniacs.—New York Trib-
nn&
DROPPED FROM THE CLOUDS.
How tbe Race Horne PfjtonU Wan *800
For Little Mis, Lowrey.
The caprices of. fortune ever consti
tute a subject for special wonder, but
the glorious uncertainties of the turf
afford perhaps a wider scope for reflec
tions on the ups and downs of life than
almost any other sphere of action. Earl
Lowrey, formerly of Pittsburg, but now
of Chicago, tells a story that illustrates
this conclusion very well..
On the morning of the day that Rey
El Santa Anita won the American
Derby at Washington park Lowrey’s
little girl, while looking over a pro
gramme of the events which be had
carelessly left about the house, was
strnck with the name “Peytonia,” the
name of an entry in the first race of the
day. So deeply was she impressed with
it that she asked her father to place her
savings of small change ou Peytonia,
the total amount being $9, which he
agreed to da On arrival at the park he
at once discovered that Peytonia’s
chances far victory appeared to be very
slim, one bookmaker offering 400 to 1
against her. Lowrey, nothing daunted,
placed the $2 per order, and in doing
so provoked a smile from the man on
the block, which so nettled him that he
promptly placed $5 more at 40 to 1 for
the place. As bas so often happened be
fore, Peytonia fairly “dropped from the
clouds” when the horses were fairly
straightened ont in the stretch, and to
the amazement of every one won the
race with comparative ease. Miss Low
rey’s fondness for the name Peytonia
therefore netted her $800 in cash, while
the head of the family was $200 better
off for acting as her commissioner.—
Pittsburg Dispatch.
The
breath
of health
from the seethe bracing
effects* of a stay in the
mountains—the toning up
qualities of absolute rest—
that rest which is so neces
sary to the weary-wife, the
overworked father—may
be found in
Brown’s Iron Bitters
U taken faithful!;-. Men and women phi
Malaria £s*kK53
xixuiwi aw. c , lil ji_ fresh en .
Dyspepsia Sfs
Poor Blood t
Urea will
_et rosy
cheeks ana
Weakness
foe it contain! the
very elcmentstired
nature is craving I
Debility
You know best whether
you need it If you are
ailing do not delay—sick
ness may be at your door 1
Tbe Genuine has the Crossed
Med Mines on Wrapper.
All Druggist and General Storekeepers
sell It. But get the genuine—
Bkown Ciewr-M. Co., Baltimore, Md.
the
a-nrt /aastVy/Jbut his
yfomatcK Was delicate.
To eoo/^. but wa^s
tire.d and sicJ^oft^e
fajfe and^jmeU ofkrd,
bought Coffblene,
haw Shortening) and
more than ev£r^ be
cause 5he mac(* better
fooJjind he could eat ft
wfffcotet amp un.J3lea.5anf
after effect. Nov/—
Jf/l
found hia BEST.
Hftd hxost healthful Short*
ever m^tde —
C^OTTOLfTNET.
no x on xanow unt tne nun times ueparunetu. w
ether countries, hare lamed eatetaat-re right to Dr. Fitcher and hia aa«lg-j tons* the
* CastovU* and tu formula, and thaS to imitate them is a state prison etfeaas »
Do Tow Know that one of the reason! for granting this government protection waa
because Caatoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do You Know that 35 wreMM does* cf Caatoria are famished for 36
toon every
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Caetorla.
for sale:
187ft acres o! land ia*Oreea coun
ty within”one mile ot* Siloam, five
miles of Union Point, five miles of
Greeneeboro. A splendid 8 room
house, five room brick hou8e,carrage
house, and four teaent houses.
Methodist and Baptist churches,and
good school in Siloam, fine grape
arbor, some apple and peach trees.
One hundred scree open land in high
state of cultivation,, well watered
with creeks and branches. . Ten
acres original forest. This land ia
level and can be bought for Eight
Dollars per Acre or will exchange
for Athena eity property.
FOR RENT
Store room, 111,Broad Street, just
below the Jackson Book Store,
splendid 'stand for any kind of
business. Now occupied hy Mr
Ingram,' pool and; .billiard room.
Rent reasonable.
John T. Anderson
115 Clavton Street.
▲thensJP,
E D. STONE,
Book'and Job Printer
|IN BANNER bUILDINO (Seeonrt Story).|..
15 Jackson St., Athens, Ga.
Having 'pnrchaatd from tbe Athen! Publish
log Company the BANNER JOB OFFICE, the
undersigned is prepared to execute
JOB PRINTING OF EVERT DESCRIPTION.
Fine Commercial Printing n Specially.
Your patronage toileted.
E. D. STONE.
Low Priced Books, Novels
and Stationery at the
George W. ChlSds.
Great lives always leave great lessons for th#
young. Such a life as that of Geo r ge W.
Childs leaves many a lesson. A few lines
which Mr. Childs wrote last Christmas are
deserving of note:
"One of my first recollections of Christmas
Day is. having nos!ed with which to enjoy the
frost-covered ground, for we had-frost and
snow on Christmas when 1 was a boy. and I
made up my mind that before the next
Christinas*arrived I should have one. And I
had and without any one giving it to me
either, as I had both earned and saved the
money with which l bought It.
"And if a lesson can be drawn from a single
Incident in my boyish Christmas, it is that
any boy who is determined to succeed will do
so if he Weep his rim constantly before him
and neglect no legitimate means toward
Gaining His End
“When I was a boy I made up mv mind
to be rich, and I also made up my mind that
when I should be a man l would give
Christmas presents to every one I knew. If I
have not been able to accomplish my resolve ii
has not been for lack of will. I can truthfully
say that the happiest week In each year of my
life is the one which directly precedes
Christmas, when 1 feel that I am able to tend
presents to about two thousand people whoa
- 1 know and feel are perfectly deserving of
them.**
Mr. Childs* natural endowments were
perhaps no greater than those of thousands of
boys, who started out In Ufe with him, but
whose names have never been known outside
of their own little circle of Immediate friends.
The Difference Was
that Mr. Childs had a definite purpose;
Wealth and Philanthropy; and see how
straight he steered to his mark. The boys
who had equal talents, but whose names the
world has never heard, had no definite plan of
i Ufe; they simply had a vague impression that
I the world owed them a living, and so they
stumbled along through life with the hope
that somehow, sometime, somewhere they
| might perhaps stumble unto fortune or fame;
but they never did; fortune and fame Are not
found that way.
It was this definite purpose that enabled
Childs, who began life as a poor boy, to
purchase the Public Ledger when it was
losing $150,000 a year, and make of it a
property that pays $1,000 a day. His fame as
a liberal giver to all worthy charities Is world
wide.
If Mr. Childs were a boy now he would be
l among tne first to take advantage of The
Constitution's Encyclopaedia offer, for boy* dt
c his mettle never mes* such an opportunity to
better their chances for
If you want success in life you must have
disciplined mind, and there is no mental
discipline tike the self-acquired habit of
investigation. With Britannica in your home
you can follow to a positive solution every
question that may come up. provided it Is
within the scope of Human understanding.
And any boy or girl can now buy a set of
Encyclopaedia Britannica. for it can be had on
the easy installments of to ceo*s a day. It
can. if you order now. but if you put the
matter off until Tho Constitution's Famous
Introductory Offer is witndrawn. you like all
others, will have to pay full retail price.
Write for specimen pages, application blank*
etc.
The Constitution
Atlanta, Qa,
general r$-
fie Great Emperor,
bnt tin v will print during 1896
A NEW LIFE OF
9LE0N.
Magnificently Illustrated.
^TuM.CuiTDitY ia (amons for Retreat
historical aerials, and never in iu bia-
tory.baaa greater onebien projected
ban this new “Life of Napoleon,”
written by Prof. William M. bloaae, of
Princeton, who bas spent many years
in preparation for bis work. Thus far
no biography of “tbe man of destiny”
has appeared in either English or
French that ia tree from rancoy and
attentive to the laws of historical criti
cism. Tun Century has secured it—
the great, all-round, complete and in
teresting history of tha life of one of
tbe most marvelous of men. No matter
how muoh you alaeady know of Napo
leon, you will want to read this; here
is the concentration of all the lives and
mtmoirr. The illustrations will be
magnificent—the wealth of Taa Centu
ry ’a art department will be lavished
upon them. Two members of the staff
have just returned ftom Paris, where
they have been securing ail tbat ia best
of Napoleonic material. New portraits
will be printed, great historical paint
ings reproduced, and Castaigne and
other modern artiste have drawn anew
some of tbe great scenes of Napoleon’s
life for this histoey.
in addition to this there will be
A NEW NOVEL BY
MAKION CRAWFORD,
The title ia “Uasa Brscciu,” «uu it is a
romance of Italy, foil of numsn passion
and exciting episode.
A NEW NOVEL BY
MRS. BURTON HARRISON’
will be punlislud during the y. *r. 1
is oalled “An Errsui Wooing,” ^ i, *
tale of wandert g (*ud iovt) among
new sceuea of travel iu ;Noi ben Arr *
and Southern Spain.
OTHER FEATURES
'Will be sever.) i.imhar papers oa„
“Washington lu Liuoda’s Tune,*' by
Noab Brock-, wi.o wx., on terms of uc-
asual tminjury vitu ineW.r tfrerideut;
Tne Gathed nil* of Fratct.,” by ttrs.
lcbuy:^r Van jteosaejasr, with illux-
rstioits by Jo-.-pn Pennell. Many more
ierinU be announced Uter.
M. DY A KD KIPLING
contributes hib First American story
to the December aum'ier of Tbs Cbn-
tury.
THl£ PRICE of Tub Crntury is
$4 «0 a year. “No home u complete
without it. ’ Begin Subscription. ,»un
November oumoer. Wu* ever otuer
magazines y >n insy t.k , y a must
nave Thx Centukt. Ail -vats a,a
dealers taka subscription?, o? remit
tance may be made directly i
Tine Century Co,
Union Square, New York.
Send for oar toaatUai illustrated munhiu
“The Century Co. and Us Work^Sd i^tW
wrere you saw tnis —«w*uu
Taken Unawares.
sloping ear fare tor travaUa^on this
“Now westward Sol haa seat the richest
beams *t noon’s high glory.*
And maeh Of civUm! America u falls.;..