Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 24, 1895, Part III, Page 18, Image 18

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18 : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ THJYlO , f .nA DAILY JUDE : SUNDAY , FEnRUA4RY J ! , 189r. _ _ I
TIlE , FRIEND l OF\VASIIINCTON \
-
Life and Eerviee ! Lafayette in the Amer-
; . iean &voution ! !
* A TRUE PATRIOT AND BRAVE OFFICER
nr..klllJ Ih" ! ! hl1eklu or 10nl , tli . Et-
Jlol'III ' , tile CoollccIlun , the Sueetel-
lug l'rlC1hhip Itnl 1.o1n\T , H IccIcItet1
11 Jcnr1 .h.brook.
The Union league or 1)etroIt Mich. , cele-
bratell the annl'ersy or the birth or WashIngton -
Ington In n manner befitting the name and
tame at the guiding genlu3 at the revolution.
The cub honored Omaha by eeleclng lion.
Henry D. I stnbrok as one of the orators ,
' - and his altre3s win worthy or the subject
and the occasion. "Washington's Dlscple"
was Ills ! text.
Mr. ttabrook's address was as rolows :
The mandatory but encouraging remark
made 1 a party at the name or 1m ( whether
him or the bible or him with the patronlmlc
ot Perkins , I wet not ) , to "get there , Ihii"
has ben hurled nt every youth In this country -
try with the le:1t : symptom of ambition. I
Is n genuine Americanism , In hue with
' 'hustler " and " " and other words .
"huster , "ruster , signifying
nlylng inordinate activity anll uncomfortable
energy. Whether a man Is running for a
street car or only for an office , ho Is admon-
Ished to "gel thero. " Iladelrnble , orcourse ,
' that he get there with both feet i otherwise
his foothold Is uncertain and his tenure as
precarious as that at the ohl relol Myron
Heed tells about-one toot In the grave and
the other 'on a banana peel.
Tha word "there" doubtless represents n
. gcal of attainment : hut It Is a vague word
, ald wonderfully Illusive. Whereabouts Is
. " ( hero ? " What do we know of the locus In
quo , as the lawyers say ? I may be "there"
i : Is a hand that Is fairer than lay : but we
know nothing or Its metes , or bounds , or lat-
/ Iule , or longitude , or . Indeed , Ir It Is on
, this planet or not. Like all cbjects at human
effort , It seems to recede precise as It Is
approached. Tl poor devil delving In a
ditch hOlIes ono day for a job which wi
keep him from the poor house. I he hustles
he may "get there : " but he wi not be satis-
lied. The business or professional loan . In
no danger at the per house nevertheles
longs for leisure to indulge seine dormant
taney. I ho Is I rustler he may "get there : "
bit ho will not be satlsflptL The rich man ,
with both means and leisure years also for
faine I he "humps" himself ht may "get
there , " but he will not ba satimfied. The
famous man wishes for a title of nobility.
In some countries lie may achieve Iti ; but he
will not be satisfied .
Hear. then the conclusion at the whole
matter ; ' fame . riches tto-very object or
worldly ambition , Isn Ignis tatuu
Anti what Is that ? An Incandescent
miasma.
Do I therefore exclaim wIth the preacher ,
"Vanity vanity , all Is vanity ? " There I :
not nn ounce at pessimism In my composi-
tion . I menton this fact , this scIentific an(1
religIous tact , not by way or ex'lrtaton or
complaint , but simply because I Explains a
fact known of alt men and utilized by
great men For there Is moral quality to
greatness ness. which distInguIshes I from clever.
THE DVINE UNREST.
Yes , the Almighty hath implanted In the
: human bret a divine unrest which only
fInds Its anodyne In ministering to others.
I Vainly the tentacles or our being clasp the
favors or this worM , dragging them Into
. self ; In the very delirium ot ! gratified vanIty
, p , there comes an apocalypse oC self . and the
' nale1 soul f"rlvels In the glance ot ! ! b
I nct , I say , dIvine , that the penalty ot
) selfishness should be n nausea to self ?
; "Shall I , " asks D11zac , "s"al I tel you
' how to make your way In the world ? You
must plough through humanIty like n cannon
ball or glide through It like a pestilence. "
. Dear pld Dalznc ! prodigy at Industry ns
- you were or genius ! Did you , tram the pov. ,
: erty at your garret , croak dire phIlosophIes t
Thank God your religion was better than
your creed , for your self-devoted life hs
' made you I way In the world higher than
that of Napoleon the cannon bal , or Robes-
' plez the pesUlence ; you are , while lan-
g\go lasts Shnllespelro at Franee !
MOn wi , cf course , make way for a can-
non bal , but what pleasure does the cannon
ball have In that ? It Is of Iron , without
: sensibiiy. I It have a feeling It Is a feel-
Ing or pride , which II hard r than Iron and
a thousand times more cruel. Men will sue-
cumb to a pestilence ; hut what joy dos the
pestilence take In that ? Its crown Is a
wreath at snakes Its breath the yapor ' of
' graves , Its laugh the gIbber or a corps
- LIFE worm ONE MAN .
My countrymen , I have preached my ser-
mon In ad\'anc To tale It cut or the ab-
stract of ethics Into the concrete of experl-
enc , I propose to illustrate It by the lifework -
work oC otto mal ; not I genius , In the sense
or that mental bias wo cal genius , but a
sanoman. Washington was sane ; a good
- mnn , as Washington was good ; a man who
born to every extrinsic advantage for which
- we worelng moil-titie , riches , social cao
-flung all his birth-rights to the winds and
- then rconquered from the world the hom-
aSE or mankInd , and tram heaven the ap-
pro.vaI or Jehovah History has enshrined
him , humanity may not forget him France '
calls him father . Surely America , In whose '
name and for whose sake he yielded the title
" tte
. of "Noble" tor that o "Man , " bartered the i
: cCtonet ot 1 marquis for the tog or a citizen -
zen , giving to the word citizen , Indeed a
- 81gnlfcance and glor-Amerlca , whose
. Washington clasped him to his hear of
11 lrhl. ant cihled him son-surel , my eoup-
tryrnen . America wIlt recall him thus fort -
t - % over joined : Washington and L1 F'ayette.
, tow can I i : extract , conilense and fuse
- ' ipto the limits or this response the..eomblned
. essence or his life und soul-a life crowded
4 Sron : youth to age with heroisms adventures
and romance ; a soul , luminous ant g'orlous
with Its love ot right ! I have tel as though
I must bring hero und read to yen the en-
tire corrcpondcnco between La I.'aycte and
1 Walhhlton : not for the effusive affectIon
, l\own \ hy the young olrer for his chieftaIn ,
but because his impetuous devotion penetrated -
trated that wondertul reserve which has
' baffled history , und led even so redoubte a
- patriot as Mr Ilgerol to say : "Washington
. has become I steel engrvlng. "
, This correspondence Jhows him to h:1o :
beit n friend ; loyal , flthrul , familiar , plays
ful and tender as a tathor. My friends , It Is
I dtcult ! ! ! for youth to worship In lbsctol
f 4 , or a steel engraving , and r ask no other evi-
deuce or the intensely human nature or
George Wnlhllgtol II all those Cu31tes
which mall for comradory nll geol fellow.
' - shIp t'JI the InUmto friendship between
hhh and two boys-most remarkable boy ,
- : oy.
. , vllh the brhil to Ippretate bralos , ( ha
' - courage which le\alds ! couragohcarts which
r ftEI 01 a eart's ! courlgoycarts ; young
Ilmlon and lo l a'eto. !
L . IA PAnilTD AND , JAll.TON.
: . Aa for La Fayette's . - .
rcinanee-thet
I.'ayeto's romancl.thlt one .ox-
( nlh,1 Passion which survh'oll all vicissiudes
nnll hiunm / like au aureolu- nbovo the elOuld (
"f' every bluoll la 1 ( hattie for song ammO
8tor ! Prom hiI .11 camp , tram forum
.1 , alll tram prison I.a r ayete round time and
means to write to the ( muisti'es3 ot his heart
I' istcf.i . letters al lD woman might read un .
iioycd I\nd sIte , the chIld wlo , fairest
- : ' gentlest , loveliest or womanltnd , became ,
. through the splendor or her hero's love , the
' 'ylsut , bravest , noblest , best The rah1 ot
- 4 terror camite and wlh It those awful years Dr
- 1le11ee amid scpurntol ; the wife Imllrlsonetl
, In Paris . the husband II Olinuta'hiat
wplmm "attainleil" ot 101le blooll Ild not
change her ) name , or sler I mok divorce .
t escpe , I lulght boo the malpel or I ) , .
: , QnlotloT Not hO the \vlo or l\alpel ( ! I
- t ! ) must he death should be worthy the (
wire ot . /uch n hlld. Her mother , sister
even tl ! . aged grandmother frail , pItIful
'lcUms to the JllrceroU knife . were Konl
elF ' gone ! Jut nOheSIlerre was klhl.d , und
Bllr was saved Yes , she was loosed tram
: Vhrls . anti like 1 hOlllng dove new straight
: t' ' Olrnutz . Yea , freedom sunlight , OCd'i ,
t I' r air enc there veto hers , ali In that
very hour " knocked at thu dungeon at
/t3istria , and In tie name at chsrlty and love
A.strla chsly
usle beged. .lnWlolN , to share the en.
el
, tUUbment ot her hu.banl. The bnoit wao
1101:0
. - gr.antell with the rlouS assurance . that It
' , IUlt be forever. Ami ) hq. they lived , In a
11hla twilight , with rags for ( lathing
. : und prison tar for toad , while mouths which
* seemed years rolled Into years which ueU't
: eternities , Her hiralth coubi
eternites hral. coul act withstand
. stalt
this train. l.a Fayette. to nbty wl to
- , - Isk one ' favor . for himself , , J = ltllet % humbly
-
.
, . .
- -'b--- V
that his wife b3 rrnled leave to go and '
regain her ttrength . Tb leave was gIven
conditioned that she should not return. Need
I assure you that she did not go ?
A WIFE'S NOI3ILITY .
A few yeas lteI their deliverance by
Napoleon this gracious womln died at the '
ohl chateau attended by her husb1nd. Every ,
act ot her life hall been n token ot her love , but ,
I was reserved for this last illness to reveal
its height , nail depth , and amazing 1lent.
tude. ler death was the transfiguration . the (
apotheosis or love roar La arelte could
Only sit at her bedside , and with streaming
yes and breaking heart tsten to the gush-
lag ecstacy or her affection. lie assured her
that alto was loved and valued "Nay , " AltO .
said , with wm : coquetry , "I care not to bc
valued If I am only loved Ah , my husband ,
there was a period when , after one at your
returns tram Amerle , I tel myself so ford-
bly atrnct 11 to you that I thought I should
faint e"cl time "U came Into the room. I
wal possessed with the fear at annoying you .
and tried to moderate , my feelings. " "Whnt
grattude I owe to God , " she would repeat ,
"that such passionate feelings should have
been a duty " Again , In her delirium she
hall ald : "If you do not fluid yourself sum-
clenty loved , lay the fault on God ; He hath
not given me more faculties than that I lava
you , Chrlstanly , humanly , passionately "
I have chosen these sentencEs front 'a let
ter at 11 Fnyele , written In holy conndence
to 0 rrlenl.o I seems almost sacrilege that
It should ever have been ItUbhiChicil . And
yet not so. Perhaps In years to come some
sublimated Zola , searching for realism , not
In the ( muchhclls of humaniy , hut In the
hearts of OOll's children , will stumble on
to it , amid learn how real , how trite how
beautiful Is human love , when man Is a moral
hero and woman his good angel !
Hilt It Is not or Ia I'ayete In the private ,
or home relationships of life that I am here
to speak ; It Is at La Fayeto as n moral force
In the history or the world-the npparltor
or law-the evangel at liberty-the minister
or God's ' will.
PATICK ITENItY'S CIIALI4ENGE.
When Patrick lenry , In the Virginia hon ' o
or burgesses , tuhnlnate1 against King George
III. , all Europe smiled at the gasconalle era
a provincial orator Ills voice scarce vibrated .
hratell beyond the room In whIch his dial-
lengo was so proudly uttered . But when
once on the plains or Lexington our cannon
spokethen spoke an orator with a voice
which mug , until , like n soundlng.board , the
vaulted sky rang back again ! I roverber-
atell In the palaces or kings ; It echoed from
the abyss or human wretchedness Fellow
citizens , wIthin the palace that very hour
hero wa3 born I Fear : within the blackness
or the abyss there was conceived a 10pe ,
What lit It portend ? What did It not
porterd1 I meant that just as the Dcca-
logue Issued from the thunders oC Sinai , so
ont or th'o thunder oC the revolution should
proceed the constitution or the United States ,
both Oud- I'/en , thunder-voicEd , one 11 the
name o ° Mora1 the other In the name or
I.lbrty.t
L
There was about the palace ot the king ,
cr Francg . 'at the ' outbreak 6t the AmerIcan
reyolutol.t young nobleman or J ! , tl ' : lar-
cpus dc uFayete , whcse Christan names
are too uUlerol' to mention. 10 was out
of the select coterie chosen by Marie Antoinette -
toinete .0 perform amateur theatricals In
her boudoir and do quadries In costume.
Ho hind been educated to sidle affably , anti
was a post-graduate In the art at bowing.
His alma mater was a dancing schdo Three
years Ilrevlon'ly , that Is , nt the ago or
sixteen , he had marred ! th daughter ot a
duke , two years younger thm himself. I
have often wendered I human nature was so
anomalous In France that children just en-
tering their teens could , with safety to the
state or with dignity to the home , assume
the relationship or marriagethat sublime
duality as mysterious as the Trinity and
wily less sncred. limit the language of France
contaIned no such word as "home" until . In
moder times , the people or France appropriated -
prlated the English word In full reprisal , It
scents to me , for our depredatons ! on their
language : As for marriage among the nobl-
ly , ha I was then , as It Is today a matter or
convention , the conveyance of heriditaments .
the merger or estates , with love as a "cn-
tngent remainder. " The court oC Franc
was utterly debauched. Arrogance had
ceased to bo arrogance for the word Implies
some consciousness . at least of another's
being : but patricians 'or France had ruled
80 lon , so , absolute and so unquestioned
that a southern planter could not have been
more oblvIous f a negro's entity than were
the French noblesse of the existence at mere
people. "Tho state ! " cried Louis XIV , "I
am' the atateL'etat. Ct mol ! "
A FAVORED Yl\JTH. (
The fortune or this YO\tl was among the
largest In guropo. Ho was accordingly
fawned upon by courtiers and humored by
the king I he was thought to bc erratic It was
, only because he had so little to say , whereas
society expected him to' prattle. le evinced .
moreover , a prediecton for his wife. Except
for these slight abberratons ho appeared to
be as sane , and almost al Insane , as feb11-
Ity In' general '
What unsuspected chord In the bosom or
this supine arletocrat thrilled In unison with
our cannon's roar ? What did his seul behold !
In the glare 'oC this frt powder nash 1 God
Impwsl ! nut surely the highest ! ue or hs- !
tory Is tG register the onward sweep
or that "power " 'llch makes for righteous.
rlglteous-
ness , " nnd In lie knowledge or Its trend conform .
form our efforts to a divine Intent Titus
and thus only may we Ilerceive how man"
kind Is urged forward and forever upward
hy nn exorablo wi , whose special agency Is
some special man This belief Is not mystc-
Ism ; It Is all that redeems us from Insanity.
\S'liat happened , lien , to La FayeUe ? What
changed him In the twInkling of an eye ?
What was , It that with strange compelling
'lnfuenpo , Iril wise men front the est to
wo\shl af ' : maler' I was a star-God' , ,
star ot'Bbilehtein ; . What was It burst In
II the lrahi or Saul , blasting his vision In aI ,
gny pt light ? I was a star-God's stay
01 truth . What was It dawned on the soul
or La Fayette , transfusing It with a purpose
so suiijflie thal henceforth all he had \Vab
offered a willing sacrifice to its accomplsu-
lent ? I was a star-God's star or liberty.
The D = ! nraton or Indepnllencever lberty.
tonco or which challenged the special privi'
leges or his class , his own prerogatives . the
l10
title ho bore lie right or his kingly gover-
menl to cxist-reilectcd the radiance or this :
rising sun and glowed with celestial tire. i
Ilk nn asterisk at destiny . like its fellow at
the cast , this star or lie ( west hung brightening -
Ing above , the cradle at men's hopes lie
needs must rolow I I
STARTING FOR AMIIILICA.
Accordingly , In April or the year 1177 , La
r.'ayeto set Hal for America In I vessel pnr-
chased and equipped by himself expressly for
the jourmisy His resoluton ld bell tall"n
ngalnst the protest ot all his friends ( save
only of her , the hest or friends ) amid In spite
or the interdiction or his ntonacii To elr
cumvent him officers or the latter he die-
rullet , ! hlm3el as a courier sleeping In eta.
hies from town to town until ho reached the
nnt rechet
saeoast But Louis XVI was not to bo
I b1mell. lie mlde It known to the American ,
Amerlcl
COreSS that tinnier no circumstances was
the Marquis lIe La JlyeUo to receive a corn-
.mlsslon : Ir Ule provisional armies. Can-
gross was , not only willing to oblige tIme
1\llg \ at France , hut . on its own account ,
thought thl' lie qulxoto services oC the
yo\thtul mntircimnis might prove moro embar- ,
rslng than uurul. Washington moreover I
fharel the same opinion lie , poor lan"
lund seen . enough or , '
IU\l leen. torelgn adventurers So
that 1110n his arrival In Fayette was gra.
clously I'eeeh'el anti ns graciously Ignoroj
I was tinnier thest circumstance , Ril when
his cherlsbell plans hall lIttle hopes ct realza-
lieu . that he addressed to congress this
brier but Immortal note :
"Alter the sacrIfices I have , made I have
the right lu exact two favor , : One II to
serve lt may own pXllense . ; ( lie other Is 10
serve as I volunteer , "
TIT MEETING.
There was nd mistaking the temper or
quality or lime \ rler or these lines. WashIngton -
Ington relented tt onC2. La ayeUe receivent
his ccmmllilon and wa appointed aldede-
camp to the COllandr In chief Thereupon -
upon ! , " 51)'S 1 recent biographer , "bcgan one
or those tender and lasting friendshIps
wl < lexll 'bttCttlt men who share great
l'erJ : In d ; rtne , pr great prlnclpli' '
They rCchclt the ramp of Washington In
time to witness I review ot troops . There
wel'c lOOi men , II\sllbly the ( torltJnest ever
calling thieinelvcs .11 army. Their muni-
tons ( . Were rreIciiod . their clothing ragged ,
and \\.IIICI any attentrt . at uniformity In
oul or col"U . tlnelrvoiiutions _ were original
hot tu ee" .1r e , IUl"lut they ( were Amer.
tn , . and Washlnltot .a their leather
"W3 should reel some embarraument , "
W sbln/tol observed , "In aho\lng ourlyC
lu ( France al cloerbo lies just left the armies or
"Sir , " rerIfd La Fayette. "it 1 to learn.
lud iu4 Iet4Jt. that I anti here , "
' 'hro , vI" , hot allllly the . uQdest ) or
ae.d..4a-
the man , but I thereby any design or
meaning In the affaIrtJ , tLthere spoke
his destiny . lie WA here [ olesrn.
To learn what To learn first at all. end
all In all , Washington 1 , heut To learn
him Ood.le Inte rltr. or staturo-his single-
ness at purpose and loyalty ot faith-his
wisdom-lila justcehis goodness-his loving i
klndnMs-hls prudence In counsel-bls coor- :
age In action-his dt l respect at self ,
combined with a divine unselnslnesshls
majesty or ) atenc3 In deteat-hls almost
melancholy jay In victory. To lan Washington -
Ington was to lear what God meant when
he made us In lila Imnge ; It was to know
man , the archltype. hero was a provincial
farmer whose pride at manhood , compared
with the insolence of n king , Ioard Into thin
emll'rean , and yet who thought so little at
thin habiments or power that all he asked
or fortune or or fate were the tranquility ot
Mount Vernon and the obscurity or his home.
What dignity could such greatness borrow
from a title ? To imano Washington as a
marquis was to hnnslno him with n ring In
his nose To know him as a man was to
know whnt freedom meant , what tree men
were , and how , to mon like those , "liberty or
death" was the dread eltornatlve. La l'ay-
eto renounced his mluJllsalc , ancl by act at
conlrcss was made a citizen at Amerlcal
CITIZEN AND PATRIOT ,
It Is not my intention to catalogue his
services to this country . either as a soldIer
on our battlefields , or as 1 diplomat nt the
court of France. 'Vo teach our children to
cherish those services In grateful ant lasting
memory lint there were two episodes oC the
war which so clearly reveal the character of
this more than patriot that no estimate ot
him would bo complete without at least no-
forming to thel ,
After tim treachery ot Arnold and his
desertion to Ito enemy I transpired hint
the ( Amerlcal forces , under La Fayette , found
themselves courontng [ the English forces ,
commandell by the traitor . One day a
nuncio tram the latter , under a nag of truce
sought an audience with La Fayette , and
handed him n lotter. Lenrnlng from whom
the letter was sent , La l ayete returned It
to lie messenger unopbmied stating that n
cumniunlcation from any other British officer -
feer would bo courteously receIved , bul that
'under no circumstances would he so much
as pen a letter tram Mr Arnold "Mr.
Arnold" was furious , or course , and AmarI
cans were threatened with condign vunisht-
mcnt. But when news or the Incident
reached the cars of Washington he wrote
to La Fayete : "Your conduct upon every
occasion meets my approbation , but In none
moro than In refusing to hell n conrespond-
once with Arnold. "
AgaIn , when La I aycr , was sent south
Into Virginia to hold Cornwals In check ,
the latter thought ho had "tho boy , " ns he
called him , where he might not escape , and
so boasted In one or his reports. But It
came to pass that " ( lie boy" maneuvered
him Into a cui do sac
HONOR RESERVE FOR WASHINGTON.
There seems to bo little debt that In conjunction -
junction with the French fleet . a battle with
the enemy could have beep fought and won
and the French 01 cora , naval and military ,
vehement ) ' urged that having cornered the
Englishman In Yorlctowl' It was due , to
La Pa'eio that he go further and achieve
the glory at his final conquest. nut the ,
friend Washington shook his heall "It
Is my duly , " said he , "to guard the enemy
until Washington arrive : to him , anti to him
alone belongs the , glory , of this coup de
grace " ' , . !
What do you thInk or. him , my country-
man ? OC his generosiy , " , Ids magnanimIty
his moral hicraisrnls' t"I Ywomler that
Washington hovel ziiit % , trusted him ? Is I
any wonder t ! t11Ii am\ ' i p3raton or thIs
response I have felt admlratcn for my
subject growlnt beyon the , lmits ot mod-
crate oxpresslon-hpillfng ItSelf In words
more rhapsodical than wise ? ,
0. man or silent mood- ! .
A stranger among strangers then
How art ( hail since tenowne , the Great ,
thc Good , il
Familiar ns the day In all the homes of
men
The winged year that winnow praise and
blame , - -
Blow many names' hut ; ' ( hey but . fan to
fame ,
The selr-renewlng splendors or thy fame.
H so be at flrst . In the exuberance or
youth , or the ennui or inaction . LaFayette
took up liberty ns , a playthrngor diversion , It
had now become thepaswn of this life. LIke
Washington ho'saw and realized the
enormty ! , the horrdr' African ' hlaver.
"Whatever may .be. the complexion or the
enslave . " he ' ' les llr""Adams , "does
not , In my opinion change the complexion oC
the crime , which Is back r than lie taco or
any Atrlcan. " With : vIew to the ultimate
extinction ot thisianoniai.y'inl our government
he founded nn Africn colony . . on the Island ot
Cayenne , hoping to educate the negro Into a
sense of treedom and indivIdualIty. But the
task seemed hopeless . And Indeed , with the
surrender ot cotJtnfs. JIl ten : ; that his mis-
sion In te world htnd beenaccomplished. . I
was hi l this belief lint he wrote t the French
minister , Vergennf : "My great affair Is
settled . . HU'lnanJty has gained Its
cause " and liberty ' 11,1 never ! 'be without n reC-
uge. ,
How purblind Is 'man" who cannot see be
yond his eyelaslel ; ' non prophesy tram day to
day what a day wilt , bring clithl His affaIrs
were not settled. Ils great affair was yet
to be. However great had been La Fayette's
career In America ( and no American will attempt .
tempt to dwarf It ) , It.\a8 but .n apprenticeship -
ship , n novitiate In the cause at liberty which
all too soon was to raga , ttmuluous In the
heart or France. For I repeat I : "lie was
here to lear " Our war with England was
not simply a political Insurreclon" ; It was a
insurrectIon of Ideas.
When , therefore , Ln Fayette returned to
-France It was nol as an 'fg or liberty , but
a Iberty's : Inc mHary. His soul , like a torch ,
had ben lighted lt that star whIch first
becltonell him away and like-a ' torch he flung
It among the dry and saple3s institutions or
hIs country The conflagration , the holocaust ,
the nameless crackling which ensuej , wC cal
The French Revolution ' 1
I could not. I I would , portray the
venomous wrlthlngs of this Infernal orgasm :
Carlyle has done It In a vertIgo of worjs.
What I would impress upon you Is the tact
that except for La I nyete this revolution
never would have been lie I was who inspired -
splrCl I , ruled it. i was ruled by It , emerged
from It to confront the sordid splendor or
Napoleon with the glory or Washington , sur-
ylved It-tyranny , anarchy dcspothm-sur-
vlvet It all , and then died . like MOEes , In
sight or the rromled land.
Prance , I salute you I In the name of Ia
Fayete , whom ) ' 01 sent to lS : In the name . of
Washington , whom wo returned to you , Amer-
lea joins with you , O ! sister at liberty , In
that shout which yet shall c'nglrdle the earth :
' 'ho kIng Is dead ! Long _ _ live n _ the republc I"
_
WHAT LIARS THEY ARI
Ur.III ! the Junl now and Iooze ! with
"OIi 111 " ihi. Itoozer.
Them were tour of them around a table
In a Droadwuy cafe , says the New York
AdvertIser , and the man tram California ,
who had ( lone little talking but had been
thinking hart \I ) tq this point , said :
"At Ogden , Utah , my train hall to walt
an hr for another train. I was nearly
midnight ! , and nlthougb there was considerable -
able snow en Inc ground I started out to
.sf'o something cf the town , A porter at the
depot told me that there was a saloon oppo-
elte 'a red IgH that could , be seen up the
street , I had walked abet a block when I
imcard the patter ot rect behind me , and on
turIng I law what I SUJIIOleil was a white
dog.Viien I called the animal would not
come forward After walking oa a little
distance I heard the patter or the feet agsln.
I turned quicklY and saw U.t the animal
was n shE } I followed me to the saloon
door and wanled te go in I shammed the
door amid asked the bartcller ;
' 'Whal's lila sheep tolowlng me about
for ? '
, ,
" 'Oh that's old Hilly , ' he said ,
"Then'one or a hal dozen len who were
standing about the stove went to the doer
and let 'old hIlly' In . One ot the others :
said : 'I guess 'bo Wants I l\lnll. '
"A cocktaIl wal set down on the floor . and
the sheep Hipped' ' It out ot the glass and
bleated for more , Well . 'I ' stood there tor
half an hour buying cocktails for that sheep .
and when he had rankl the fifth one he
shambled over 10 u bll rd table crawled
tinder I and went to slcep. I found out
front the men that 'old Illily' was In tl. (
habit ot gettng fui'every night , and always !
raised a big rumpus In' the morning \ he
eouhln't gR a brar. lie kad been a paL
euuku't baCr. " < le 1 le a pe
c-f some fellow uUlI.tl boys.hal taught him
to drink. " t , . . -
The other three men cot up and bad ) the
Californian goo : night , ald al hey ( were
utoullg up their C11 at the rout [ door
cue ct them saId ; u . ' r
"What d- tiara , t\e , lornllns au ! '
_ _ _ .
2- - - ' - - ' - - - -
STORIES OF ARTEMUS WARD \
James p , Gimoro's ' Personal Reoolectons
of the Genial Ellowman .
ARTMU3 ONCE CHARGED WITH ROBBERY
1'ounnlattoi , or lug Great Jlorll Show-
. \rtlll ' lttOliqO to I Toalt-r"tIO , ns
\lthor-'Vhcro lie not the
W01d"Se'CshL" -
ill
,
'
( Copyrigli1 " , lt1 ibyS. S. MrClur )
"Artemus 'VIJ.thl , : genial sho\man. was
not 1 mere Yahktl humorist , Ills genius
was thiorough1yofmiopohitan and he himself
n "rolling ston 'i' 1 lint though everywhere n
.
stranger , he , -a rerywhmere at home In
Ierywhc
his native plae'terford , Me. , he receive
n common school t\lucaton , and , being early
thrown upon Ills \fn \ resources , hc , at ( lie
ago or 14 , ent red " ' \"e Clarion printIng ofce
at Showcgn oLearq his livelihood ,
Invlng learned set type fairly well his
restless spirit son set him In motion , and he
roamed about , tr/r one country prInting
ofc ? to another'tl he was 16 , when he found
himself stranded Ir' ' Boston however . ha-
lag already ma , hllsct a first class typesetter -
setter , he had no ' difficulty In securing employment -
ployment In the ufco or the Carpet Bag a
comic journal cOhlluetnl by Shlaber , the
ramous " : lra. Partington , " who was then
very liimsy In keeping back the waters or thc
)
Atlantic ocean Here "Artemus \Vard , "
born Charles Farrar Drowne , was In lila cle-
niemit a 111 SOOI he began to try his wings
In lie congenial Carpet Bag , to the great Ile-
light or " : Irs. ParIngton" and this' remarlt-
ahlo boy "Ike , " who " "mlere1 much what
rare bird hall strayed Into their ( nest
But In vain they wondered , for Artemus
carefully concealed hlllel , and hearing
Horace Greele"s "Go west , young man , " he
before long took fight again not alighting till
ho had reached Toledo , O. Hero he re-
Innlne ; : ! but a short time , when ho removed
to Cleveland , where he took quarters In the
composing room or the Plain Dealer . ni able. '
widely circulated Journal ana a great power :
In that portion of Oblo. I
FOUNDATION OF A. W\RD'S GREAT
MORAL SHOW.
Here "Artemus . 'Yard" was born , and grew
to mnturlt uller the rosterlug care oC this
influential newspaper. At first hc was em-
played nt t'psettlng.nltng only short
thing to fill up some vacant column oC the
journal . But these short things attracting
the attention of the editor-in-eltief , hB was
promoted to the editorial staff . where hI son
alened the me'nngr . or "Arternus. Ward .
Showman " into which he IntrOluceil ( from
tithe to time "three moral hares , a Kan-
gU:0 ( a amooslng little Haskal-'twoul make
you Tart yersel to dE'th to see the lIttle cuss
jump UJ and squeal ) : wax riggers or G.
wc
\
ARTEMUS ARD. ' , .
, lS .
Washlrioh ? GEerdl ! Taylolp.Qohn' ) ; Bunyan ,
Captain Kldd and Dr. Webster In ihe act ; oC
killing Dr. Parkman ; ' besides several mls-
celanys wax Isfatos a celebrated pirates '
and murderers , btch ! ; elcalled' by' few and ex-
cold by none. " II' t ' . ,
The menagerie took . Cleveland by storm ,
and scarcely anday passed. . without some
country reader , ! f Ahe Plain Dealer applying
a its countng , rep for-a sight of the , Kangaroo -
garoo , the moral "Bares" and the wonderCul
wax "figgers. " . .
Being In CflaJ In 1885 I mode ( he acquaintance -
quaintance or ere f , the eitors of that jour-
nal . who had been the assocIate and friend
of "A. 'Vart' at , ( his period. He described
tOe hIs apparace when he first cam to
the Plain Dealer 001cc. He was . he said ,
long and lank , \ svIh flowing hair , loosely
fitting coat , anu trousers too short In the
legs and bagging at the knees. Ills humor
was Irrepresalbl , lways bubbling over , and
he kept all about him In a constant Dtale ot
merrment. ! le . goqid see. only h ! ludicrous
side oC a subject-was a wag , and In that
tne n genius. :
ARTEMUS WARD'S RESPONSE TO A
.TOAST.
He soon took ont ! more becoming raiment ,
and wherever he went he beamsa universal
favorite. Soon after his promotion to the
editorial star he' was , called upon at a Ben
Franklin festival respond to a.toast to the
press. He rose to his feet , lung hIs head
for a few moments In silence . and ( lien sat
down , having said tnotliing. Ia hIs own ac-
count ot the restval : In the next day's Plain
Plan
Dealer his speech was reported hy a blank
cpace or nearly half a column . '
Ho made a rertnlght.s' visit every year to
his mother In Maine , and when about to gI
ciT al one er ( lucre . vacations he employed
the gentleman to whom 1 have rererred to
perform his dutIes In his ubsene . After
carefully instructing him as to his work , he
drew from his pocket a pIece or to\\ ' Itrng :
about a toot hnd a hair long saying that was
the ' amount or copy he would le expected te
furnish per day , and he left n on lila desk
at a rEminder of the' quantity ,
"A. \Vnrd's" absurd 11esrlplDS ot h's
Imaginary menagerie ; his keen witticisms ,
shrewd sayIngs and Irresistble plays or humor -
mor , secured him , a wide reputation , and
after Heveral yean' cQnnctlon wIth the Plain
Dealer lie WS , invIted to remove to New York
Clv and become a renular contributor to
Vanity Fair , a sI ertUvet but exceedingly ; ; -
' brIlant comIc journal , then edited by that
'accomplishEd ' scholar and thorough gentleman -
man , Charles Godfrey Lebnd ( Hans Urelt-
mann ) .
A CONTRIBUTOR TO VANITY FAIR .
This gave ArtcnnisVard a more extended
audience , and a national r'utation , Ills
sayings WEra soon , In the 10uths at every
ncrther mann , ' and lily ( ll very much to us-
!
sin 1 sentmlnt of loyalty te the union. life
satire waD keen , but vry genial , and beneath
I all was a stratum : of shrewd American
eommen sense that appealed suIte to political
friends and I nenties r l\ow or nothIng ! that
so w1 depicts the trcublous times cr the (
early yearn or the civil war as his sll tchio
In Vanity FaIr . AD mere pcturca ! . at the
war perIod they have a p'rmanent historical
"alue. Nowhere ehe arE tie clearly shown
the confused ant jarring notions Dr the avr-
age AmerIcan on the great emaoel13ton prLb-
lem , er such a portrait 18 that at the gushIng !
iatniot lie lent all his own nn(1 his wlro'
) ,
relations to the front , but stayed at home himself - .
sel.These
These sketches , ' written at the tarlle t
period at the ( wlr , vlviHy express the
nation's trials and'/perplexlles , and no one
can read them' , now without being struck
with the strong hold they took upon to
people , as \ i evidenced by lie great pum-
her of his witty : 'Iylngs anti happy turns
oC thought limit h/ve become a part at the
language or tiuacountry . Some or his single
words became rt QUI a part or the national
, 'oclbulary. I . \a1" apace to menton only
one but ( list \'lhe recognized by every
reader j
WmmE HE GOT TIE WanD "SECESTI. "
One day , I think It was late In 1862 , he
came Into my ofbe looking utterly woe-
begone , as Ir Jb had lost hla every friend ,
and taking ( a sltJrear to ly table he said
In . tanms "I ! the
a malt IUlbr/ul tJII ; say
man that sits ocr ) ' day lt ( Charley Ieland's
elbw nult enjoy UC : vOIY sunshine of humln
existence , and t h& able to com tort a suffer-
big mortal Can you tel mo It there la In
this date any IInlllg ( for stealIng ? "
Suspectng come .jIClC1 joke I answered
guardedly : ' } I/n I hot n lawyer , Artcmul.
atini I ) now Hry little of the erlmlnll ca.ie
but Judge Pjmcnda , , shio got up the H.-
a'----- - - . ' - - . 27
vised Statutes , Is I friend or mln-I'I ask
him and I wont cost you n cent. "
"Welt . do ; for the question troubles mo
" .
.
RrIRly. tbSi 'f
pocket "WhyT ? " have , , ' Ol been picking sonic on'l
"Not eXActy that , but Ive appropriated
another man's horse. Ive docked his tall ,
and Ill may nol discover the theft , and It
he should wouldn't mhll n few months In
Fort Iatareto ur Ludlo\ Street jaIl . for
they'd have to give me tree hearth amid lodging -
lng , Dut to bo strung UII by the wlllPh >
antI made to dance on ito top of airy
nothing I Iather than submit to that I'd
Jlt
"antotse ' , absqlatulate , leave may country ,
much os I love It. " "
"Well , Artemus , In all cases ot conscience
It's best to go according to scripture. Yon
know I says : 'Agree with thine adversary
quickly while thou art In the way \ Ih him. '
I _ , , me know against whom YOI have offended
anti I'l mollify him Ill go across the street
any day to save you from hanging. "
"r know you would , amid heaven wIll bless
rOi for It. He Is that follow who wrote
'An.ong the Pines. ' lie hall a favorite horre
that he called 'Seseshener ' Wo locked that
horso's tail by cnlng him 'Secesh' all set
him runling as my own. Time offense the.
olenso
ce-
serves lianglmig but Ill rather nol hang for
It I It's all time same to you . "
'I Was 1 happy stroke at genius , Artemu8.
That name will last as long as lie word
'Yamikee " and \ 1 malto you . lmttmnortnli"
AUTRMUS WAnD AS A LECTUItEI1 .
When Charles O. Lelanll resigned to take
the literary editorship or the Continental
Monthly "A , 'ard" succeeded him as clltor (
or VanIty Fair , and soon he began his remarkably -
markably slccess11 ! oar.er ns a lecturer. In
( lila clacl ) he visited Utah and California ,
anti returning to New York In J86 he pro-
Iluced a series or lectures al Mormonism ,
which took the publc by storm , anll even
non' are a delight to those who read his
book on Brigham Young and his people In
the spring or 1866 he went to Iondon , In-
( ending to at once begin a lecturing tour or
Great Britain , but tailng health uuflell
him for the work unt Jnne of that 'ear.
Ills lecture were as great a success In gn-
bnd as they bad been In this country , amid !
his contributions to the London 1uleh , which
bgu at the same ( line , tool rank with those
ot the most fatuous humorists ot our tIme ,
who hdve one minI all wrlten or that noted
journal Few things In humorous literature
are bettor than hIs reflections. "At the Tomb
' " which ' his contri-
or Shakespeite , was hil first -
buton to Imumichi .
ARTEMUS AT TiE Tom OF SHAKES-
PEAI1E .
"I told my wife Botsey , " he says , "when
I left home that I would go to the birthplace .
place of' the ortler of Oheler and other
pla's. She said that as long as I kept out
or Nowgate she didn't care where I went
mimi , ' I said , 'don't you know he was ( lie
greatest liol ' that cvpr hived ? Not one or
these common pelts . like that young Ilylt
who writes verses to our elaughter nbolt
the roses as Rrowsea and the breeza as
blowses- but a Boss Pelt , also a phIlosopher .
also a man who knew n great deal about
everythi lag. '
"Sho wa packIng ' 1) things at the time .
nnd the only nnswer she made was to ask
me I I was again to carry both at my red
flannel night cap ! .
"Yes , 1'1 been to Stratford onto the Avon ,
the birthplace ot Shakespeare. Mr. S. Is now
no more. He's been dead ever three hundred
(300) ( ) y ars. The people or his native town
are justly proud or hint They cherish lila
mem'ry , and them as sell plctumrs or his birth-
:
place , etc" , make I prof'ibie cherlshln I.
Almost everybody bus a plctur to put into
their Alblom : -
"As I stood gazing at the spot where
Shakespeare ! Is spo'ed to have rel down on
the leo all' ' hurt hlsslC when a boy ( thin
spot cannot be bcught-the town luthorltes :
say It shall never be taken rom Stratford ) :
I wondered It- three hundred year hence plc- ,
turs of my birthplace will bo In demand ?
WI"the " people " hf my native town be proud
or 'nW In thr e hunred years ? I guess they
won't short or that time . because they say
the Cat man \\'clghlng 1.MI pounds which I
exhIbited there was stuffed out with plers
and shlons.whlch he said one very hot day
In July , ' 0 , bother , I can't stand this , ' all
commenced puln the plers out from under
hlii weski ( . and heavh1 em at the audience.
I nevraW ' a ' joan lose flesh so fast In my
Iife . , The audtnce said I was a pretty ! man
lte. , come chlseHn mY uiw n townsmen In that
way I Enid , 'Don't be angry , teler clii-
zenal"cxhlblted.'hlm ' simply as a work of
art. i mpl' wished to show you that a
man could grow at without the aid at ce {
liver oil. ' nut they wouldn't listen to me.
They arc . a Jpw,1mnd \ groveln set or people ,
who eclto Ip\v'nd or loathing In every
breast ; where ' lofty emotions and original
'Ideas have a 'bldln pTdce. "
, 4lJMORIST'S J UNTIMELY DEATH.
Buk.rThol44 sojourn In England was
Dut..r" i bY"Ii { continued Iii health. I
rapidly declined , and he set out to return to
this country , but death overtook ! him before
ho could get upon shipboard , and he
breathed , hls : lat , at Southampton , England .
on the 6th ci March , ISGI , at the early age
or 32. _ Dy his , will . after providing for Ills
mother and. for a young man he had under-
talln ' to , educlte , ho heft all his property to
round au .i . asylum for printers ant their or-
phan c ldrlm ! Ills affection for his wIdowed
mother was pecularly beautiful. She sur-
vived him several years , and whenever she
spoke or him liner his death , It was his long
and faithful love ot her that she dwelt upon ,
and not upon the brIlliant qualities that had
made him world-tamous. They now lie together -
gether side hy side In the grass-grown
cemetery at South Waterford , Me. , with a
slmp monument over their heads , on which
ii the sIngle word "Drowne. " This Is all
that now marks } the last retngplace or the
greatest oC American humorists In his
short life hh created one or the most orig-
Inal and amusing characters In all literature.
Tloso' Who , Imew him wel are or the cplnlon
that bad liq lived his taml would have rivaled -
valed ( hit ' ( br Rabela\ or Cervantes
DOCTOR
4\ SEARLES
J I i " & SEARLES
'
, . ! 1i Chronic
.I
' ir r Nervous ,
" i ht , ! \ i lrIv ) te
" " , ' ' " - - - ,
i\"wi ' (
' 'v \ ' '
Itf . ,
. \ \ 1 \ , , i Dseases ,
TitIT.1lIT UY MAIl. . COlsuIIUOII're" .
We euro Cattrrh , all cisosos ; of the
Nosu , Throat , Chest , stomach , Liver ,
Blood , Skin and Kidney Diseases , Fe-
male WHlltuossos Sltu , Lost islanbood . and
ALL PRiVATE DISEASES OF MEN. .I
VEAK SeEN ARC VICTIMS TO nmvous I
W'AI' or lxhauetloo. \ V.sUnl'ello. . " , In
D.bll ) L. . . with Early 1.C8) Ie ) lunl
and mtddir aged ; lack of vtm vigor Ind\ulen.d .
old Die. Mi ycild
prematurely In nppro&chlnl Al ) eld
readtt , In fur new tr.atment for . or vial
readl for elr-
with atamp
powcr . Cs4 or or address wlh
"wcr. CC .
< ular- ! . free book .ini recIpt1.
Dr , S9arles and SeHlas ( , 1410 DuiutiimnNoii Fuimnittmn ;
1
. 8 .
Fale People
tJ X ' .
, t , often wonder why thcy feet so
, 'I . . -4 ' ' debilale-why their cheeks ,
:
t n > ? lips and tongue are almost I
'I ' r3 co1or1ss . The reason is easy to
J ' ) ' ) find . The blood is in an abA - I
t ) I normal conditon , and is def-
_ ' .
. '
dcnt in red corpuscle. This
\ " ColIditiOhi is not a disease in
J . - , ' ' ' itself , but the result of IISCaSC I ' 1
t . - _ \ i ) \ \ It I may be produced by dyspep-
/ a sia , malaria or hemorrhage j
\ ; \ . but the most common CauSe is j
J insufficiezt / iidiiIion. What is "
wanted is a nutrient which will increase the vial force and put _ ,
\ the blood in a normal conditon ,
, Ozomulsion-
, doe this as no othcr remedy can. I supplies the nouishment
Y to build up the U3UC and increase the red copusce of the blood , '
, I thus give strength and color. I doe this because it contains j
\ Ozone and Guaiacol The , dctro the germs of disease ahId Y
, make appetite. TIle Cod Liver oil sthPllies tile food that Puts )
011 tIle flesil aild niakes sti'ength. This hUcahls ilcaitli ; atitl Ilealtil \
c means happiness , contentment and wealth. Oz0MiJLSION 'IS
The Rciiiedy Colds , Coughs , Consumption amid
, all Pulmomiary Troiiblcs ; Scrofula ,
Physiciaiis ; Debility , Loss of Flesh ,
Prcscribc 1 Atlamhs anti \VaMing IIsenses ,
_ _
0 ( 1
c -
Eandsome 1llustrate Pamphlet Free. T , A , SLOCUM CO , Pearl ut. , hew York.
KUHN & CO : 15th and Douglas Sts , , Omaha.
EXACTSIZE ' PERFEC11
TIlE MERCANtILE IS TilE FAVORITE TEN CENT CIGAR ,
For stlc by all Fiist Chass Dealers , Mannfactut'od by the
F. R. iHCE MERCANTILE CIQAFI CO , ,
- Fmtctum'y No. : rni , st , r4uIMa
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 5
I Ii 0 ELJEI I LJEI0LI , 1LJ
U D
U U
LI It.IsOfNoUse
LI LI
to t1at t1ere is "
say "Soirietliing Just
El
LI as Good as Ripansrfabules for
I-I disorders of the stomach and -
U-
U ' ,
, ,
LI liver , it 1' is not so , This standEli
U arci remedy will rlieve and cure '
ULI YOU. One tabule gives relief. LI LI'
. . LI
U--
- [ I
LI Ihipans 'rabules : soi by druggists , or . by mail .
If time price (50 ( cPnts a box ) is sent in. 'Flue ICC.
pans Chemical Company , Na. JO Sprr'C . , N. Y.
LI _ _ j
r-IDIIDIEIL..JEJLJLI I LII I ! IDEJETO
-I- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
. ,
; _
cji'roLE ' .ruiN'riiit bctn usci by tiioutsmiuinn : of laUic maoiuthly. , It is
mimmrrit'cI : lady'a imittittl it imregtular troth ammy cIume : , It i safe
tuitl , rehmabia. hover filla , , , guarantee , vitiu ever' buiiiu , intro to mm day , 'title niedk'imtu Is far superior to
1,1115 , tiB etery . bottle Isoihad mutmU mmiior loses its str&tiutIt , doid. by till iemtiliv ( inugcm'htL , I'ncs. 2.OO
per tottiu. If your druggist dons not have It a.aait $2.00 and we will forw.irI you a LjtLto by cxpr.msl
' CIMOLE JUNIPER CD ,
t - Western 011km , Omaha , Nobrasha ,
DR. C. E WO.
WHOISHE !
He Is one of ( ho most
, , skillful of Chinese doe-
tori , bmuso of tile great
- I knie-Iedga antI cures.
Itaving been , ight years
. ' fl tile medical collea of
I.-l . ' W China lie undersanis time
r 4 I -imamedinto cr1101 , ( if oter
( I . ' / nieoo remcdI With fear.
' 2W' teen years of practice and
' . . _ -v four yecia of ( list
-r--- - ' ( line iii Omatia hue given
him ii rcnUtatloii iaclictt
' - Ip by timoussui'is od nestt-
, . . nonlais lii curmny lVEli
. - - : r'Y r iiscape.
, , Tit00 ' ' 1iiNIti - Oil OTi1tiItW'IB. Dr. C.
Gee Wo guarantee , a cure in ovvry case or the
money viii Le refumulee. Conmuitatlon free. Bend
a two.cent Btamnp ( or book and question blanha.
I
Dr. C. God. Wo. , 5iONldtii StOiimahiafcb
illoM's BroMu-ior.
Iten3id cnrt'.Ie agent fcc. lervous or ,
? eadine , Jirain EmlumuttDhl liea
.smecir.l or gtnarai Net'mmigislitO iOIutl'C. {
B matim , Guilt , JUdni iflsor , crc , ItidiI ;
. A
iei'4" Anaunta. ) , ntidoti Car
t.n.t oL'hter ezcee5Ce. 'rice , 10 , 2Aad C'9OtC. '
1uiurvt'cea.
C TIlE ,4BNOLD CHEMICIIL CO.
ml o.tr' . . . ' 1'.HCAi3 $
L'cr .le bl all druggists , O'l'sbi- .
EW FACES ALt , AminE ? CflANfIfU
n
lmol"outuresflndlcUiOV.
hI , , ( Jlleiuiehestn lki p. Ik fO U 5ltiiip.
,5lua 11 , VmcI1uir' , 121 5V' . 12i114t. . U , ' ,
invent-u , of Voodbury'b rucias iSoan.
ou $ UICKEI
TI , , , N itNl' 0 TJuIiIl if 1JIIIO i'
'l'tirrant's Fixtiact of Cu.
t.ois . and Cammmmma in , a care ,
certain no.1 dUtch cure rod
: , gororrmiea end gird and is
an old'tiItd ronmidy for emi
. , llsoaiei3 of ( hi , urinary or-
- gaas. Cuniijlnhimg in it mtiijmmly
toncentrameti form the me-
I - , hlcinal VlmOues of cinbebi
nnd caprilba , lii portabi ,
- sImnImc' , freedoiti ( rain tuita
mind speedy mctinn ( curing tnt
'
r , . . 1cm. ' , unto titan any oilier
. 'p mtrcmmnrntlon ) maui it 'i'iiii
, c" mos'i' sAnuAIJnI ; ; KNOWN
Itl-51E1)Y , To trevcnt ( maui ,
see _ tmat even' pacti&ise hail a red shin , micresa thu
Isc-c of tebel , whim the eignatlilti of Taut-ant &
( a , . , N. Y , , upon It , I'itl'ii , $1.00. $ fluid tqp all
drucnista.
vIi OF
El3iIy , ctulckly , Pcrmanemlly ; flestorel ,
, . , , , Vcakmmess1 Nervohlsno's ,
. \5)obilIiy , and all the tinla
(1 , ' f evils ( mmii curly errors or
lawr nxerees , : ' thu results ol
oyerwork , * ic'kmieis svom-ry ,
' . _ eic , Fulietmonigtli , duvet.
, opuncutnund toieg1vemi to
' every UErImnI uimini umo"tlea
i/l - of tInoliy , tiumitc , lint- .
' 4 I , - ' I tmral imiethmninis , ( mmmli.
I ' I / ate imltrocment hCCU.
Failure ! Ilile , : .tYi , eturiuitas. lli'ok ,
exiilanatiolm nail hiwoIe ui&ilcJ isealudi free ,
p. RlE MEDIDAL 00. . Buffalo , U.Y
. .
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H I1 A U T I F U L T N N T Li
.
VJiat is there niore attractive iii one
, tliaii their ' 11ct1i ?
; - p-
1' 110W' hIL'CtiSSiIh' It IS tiitit they Hlmlmd ! be aaaratI for
j// //4/// . 1/ , , by an iiittifligcmt Dentist % 'I1 ( ) tnIt. $ pi'lde lii IllS s'oi'It ?
Poor dentistry Is worth'ess ' , "Il % Vl'SC tIhhtfl
.i osotluingfor lteuIdcH tlmoa limus of lflomle ) ' paid oUt there
aIIi ! gIitG ( ) tOt
/,1cf,10 , . _ J : lu-st S'IlO vili he respoilsible for their ciiz'- .
FIST Or. ROWLAND W BtILY , Dentist.
: 3d Floor Paxtoti 13ock. i 6th nud Fariiam Sts ,
1 t --a-- - " . Tel. 1085. Lady Atentiant ,
et4t
; ' , - . - - ; -r ' Reasonable Prices--the same to all
. _ _ _ - ' - " Iiivcr nulid Al'oy ' Filliimg , $1.00 i'orcoitln : Crowns . . . , , , 45.00
I t - - - - : 1 n I'uro Gold lliiiui , , . . $ and hlrideo 'l'i'eiim 43 iOr t.oOiiu
4 I C i . t4ut. 'Fectiu . , , , , . , . . . , , , , , , . $ .OiJ tip mith utttuuchnimutit , , , , ' ,
. , - - - heal Teeth , , , , , . , . . , $7,50 t'iiimiuA j-xlraetiomm , . , . , . hiUq
- - * , , _ ! ' " AhItJoidGrowmun'42k , .
- . ' ! i . ' - / : Use Dr. Bailey's Tooth Powder.
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