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About Dayton herald. (Dayton, Or.) 1885-1909 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1896)
bi tratos in the delimitati«»«* tbe brand- aries at these «mutrie« ,. The remarkable feature of the news tig from serotata. often inherited, prat- lively, perfectly and permanently cured by wood’s FOR A GREATPARADE VtTERANS OF THE NORTH AND SOUTH Will UNITE. Cantrin^f^ ■‘T®* Rneemouan, Captai» Norman, from Norfolk rad Plym^h Ulth’ k“** Plymouth the other evening the captain J<»he American ship Belle O'&ien, !aSd^S’“*** w,,h “■ Tbe movement for a reunion and pu. lade of the civil war veterans has now •ssumed the fora that <"«^» winners ^»iube seen Tn New York nSraiF fo the Fourth of July. Often of late yean the veterans of tbe Confederatqjeryice have teen called in to the gatherings of Union veteran« Often, too, at tbe south, those who onra wore tbe blue, accepting hearty invita- tions. have mingled with those that wore the gray and-pertatoe-hftve aaruhed -WHh'them. The encampment of tbe Grand Army, the ralebratiana of Deco ration day and the dedication of battle parks, like those at Gettyebnrg and Chickamauga, or other ceremonies oon- nected with tbe war have witneesed such reunions. But now, for the first time, fee Union and Confederate survivors of tbe war Maria Christina, quasar ragrat ef Spain, once dodged when asked to bo an arbitrator. But then the dispute wee between two women, the wife of the speaker of the oortes and the wife of the minister of justice, who both claimed the same seat in the oortea gal lery. The prime minister declined to settle so important a matter of etiquette, whereupon the husbands went with the «■* toTbe queen? %e to ehbri; 4^ited, and rairing her tortoiee shell lorgnette to her ey ee ebe surveyed the contestants for a time. Then she feigned illness and withdrew. A few days later ebe went into the country “for her health." Since ahe baa been regent Spain baa had more real peace than in many yean before. Her pari tira has been most try- ing, but she has maintained it heroical ly and snccesefully. By winning sym pathy ahe hae accomplished what shrewd, powerful stateemra failed to do—maintained 1 in one of the m< Europe. Simple in her tMtM, ebdofo “d Pere picked apfrom a email boatra Nov. >7Mthey Uhkain statement a significance which will grow from the present time until the celebration is Arid and which will give it.a national importance as one of the great eventaoF 1898 and indeed of our day. The idea of a united veterans’ parade has been received with great favor throughout the south. For the purpose of finding out bow it would bo accepted rigid gale sprang up, and the pumps became have done or them, as will also the na- very difficult to work on account of the tivaa of tl 1 fantastic islands of Celebes grain in the hold choking them. As the and New < aioea The route then car- ■fiififf rateiaum^ t iu0 lam wm I«« * con —---- *-*' ------- * ■ w —■ ■■ gmiucu, gxmia tiny ea rWtMiWiM through Torres straits swell until it bulged the planks on the to the eastern ports of Australia. After ship’s sides and heaved her decks. We ’ several pauses to enable them to obtain did not relax our desperate efforts to 1 a face to face realisation of the devoted keep the ship afloat until we were sight martyr lives sprat amid the lowest and ed and picked up by the Rosemorran. ” darkest populations of the globe they TOOK PART OF HIS 8KULL. j ether leader« My peruonal opinion to , that, while the old veterans do not care to be paraded for ahow or to show them- . Wives, if it is fee sentiment of tbe coun- • try that good can be accomplished by ' joining in this parade, I am satisfied I. that they woujd be willing to do any- ' thing that would assist in a moreper- rfisra rennoiMation «».would aastot in | MNjrjg praperity to any section of fee "Aa io well known, they are thor- ougbly emd intensely patriotic, and I doubt if anycitisena ot tbe republic would rally more quickly and seriously to the defense of fee national honor than those old southern soldiera ? “Some time since it was announced thst the United Confederate veterans were to be invited to bold their next reunion in New York city. This, I be- I Heve, was wellgeceived by tbe veterans and press of the aouth. Tbe parade to a new feature, and in order to give you a ' definite anew« I will confer at onra with the commanding general and other leaders and veterans and will also place tbe matter before the preee of tbe couth, co u to ascertain tbe trend of opinion «this subject." Colonel Garnett has not beard again from General Moorman; but, as bra I been said, be hae seen that nearly all of tbe southern papers are heartily in favor at the movement Tbe next Confederate reunion will take piece in Richmond. It was at first suggested to have tbe re- aoion on May 84, 38 and 38, but tbe Ctailing sentiment ia tbe south to to e it a month later. General Moor- ann to of tbe opinion feat the beet datee lor the reunion are June 30 and July 1 »nd 1 If this is done, the veterans can tome to Naw York from Richmond, in which case tbe number of them that Will come will be largely increased. Colonel Garnett to most enthusiastic «ver tbe movement and said that be Would not be at all surprised to see SB,- 000 Confederate veterans in tbe parade. —New York Sun. numaa’ Q* m * Will. Th* will of the late Alexandre Dumm ■Mbit« the publication or the perform* any poethninona works or playa After he waa placed under the influ ence of ether Dr. Sappirl rat through the abscess, and with a fine saw re- moved the diseased part of the skull, leaving a hole about the rise of a stiver quarter. The patient was watched care fully, and to doing so well that the sur geon feels confident that the operation win prove a success. As soon as the blood that flows from the wound baa been sufficiently staunch ed a silver plate wijl bo placed over the opening in the skull If sll goss well. Policeman Klumpeter will be back at his post within two or three weqka STRANGE TELEPATHY. ? Wbile a fair wm being held in the basement of St Mary'a Church of the I Immaculate Condition, Williamsburg, N. Y., the other night, Mrs. Sarah Jane Morris, a Widow, waa suddenly taken ill and died a few momenta later. Her daughter Maggie waa to have I rang at the fair that evening, and Mra. Morria had gone there to hear her. At the moment when her mother waa taken I I Without knowing of the illness, Miss I Morris suddenly stopped singing, end ■ when her teacher asked bar what the I cause was she began to cry and raid she | was all choked up. Presently a messen I ger arrived and told Mias Morris that her mother bad been taken ill While Mias Morris and the sister were hurry ing to fee church they met another mes senger, who told Mice Morria that her will be in a mood to appreciate civilised Australia. The itinerary then provides visito to the Missionary archipelago in the far southern seas, under auspices that will afford the voyagers every opportunity to seethe missionary and civilised.foroes at work in the remote regions. The Fiji, Tonga and Samoan groups will be visit ed and extended trips to Melanesia and Micronesia will be made, enabling the tourists to gain at first bands the story of the conquest of these isolated little coral worlds. This section to regarded as the very birthplace of mission work. The return will be made by way of Honolulu, and a general tour of the Hawaiian Islands sud New Zealand will be made. The missions at Albuquerque, Las Vegas and Santa Fe will be mads on the outward trip, and those of north etn Canada visited on the return. A large number of people have al ready expressed a desire to accompany the party, but it has to be limited, owing to the fact that in many of the places in the South sea islands there are no ac- oommodatiogs to* be had other than those afforded by the missions. The heavy contributors to foreign missions who cannot themselves be members of the party, as well se the different boards of foreign missions of various denomi nations, will send representatives. The missions visited will include those of every denomination, which will enable the pilgrims to form com- parisana—New York Journal. According to the United Statea mint officials, the words, "E Pluriboa Unnm,” m they appear on our coins, are there without the sanction ot law. The legend flrat appeared upon a copper coin “struck” at the Newburg (N. Y.) mint In the year 1788. The United Statea waa vary young at that time and could not afford the luxury of a mint, so a private individual of the name of Brasher opened the Newburg coining es tablishment with the intention of turn ing out money of the realm for all corners. Exactly how the words “E Pluribus Unum” came to be uaed aa a motto to not known, but one thing ia oertain, the Braaher copper coin bear ing that legend and the date of 1788 to the meat valuable metal disk over mint ed on thia continent, being worth about $3,000, or twice aa much as the famoua rare dollar of 1804. Some time after coining his famoua oopper with the odd Latin motto aa above described Braaher tried his hand on a large siaed goldpiece, producing the coin known to the numiamatiat* as "Braaher'a twenty.” The Brasher “twenty” was not a $30 goldpiece, however, for it lacked $4 of weighing enough, but of late yean it has become vary scarce and valuable because of the fact that the legend inaoribed upon it reads “Unam E Pluribus" instead of “E Plnribua Unnm." This ooin ia now valued at $1,800.—St Louie Republic. At the tegular monthly meeting of the eection of astronomy and physics of the New York Acedemy of Sciences, Professon Rees and Jaooby and Charlee Post read papers attacking the alleged dtocoverira of lines and oanato on the planet Mara The attacks were princi pally directed againet Percival Lowell of Boston, who while at Flagstaff, A. claimed to have seen the name lines And canals dissevered on the planet by Signor Schiaparelli in Italy. After the reading there wae a general diecuari«, and the conclusion arrived at waa that there people were romanoeraand not aa- tranomera The academy therefore dis carded the theory of eunata and lines ra Even Saxon courtesy and readiness to the planet Man until such Mme «n they oblige may be carried a little too far. erald be seen more plainly, or st least When about to return from a Bohemian village to a frontier town in Saxony, the occupants of a sledge had their foot warmers carefully rinsed out and re plenished with full bodied Hungarian wine. Thus they passed tbs guardpost without let or hindrance, to the many tingling of the atoighbella. Laughing and joking at the success of their little The frandsrof Mohammsdanfsm were both tan in piaras that an nw ander y« mia of the TurMeh selten, who, until a few yean ago, roted atoooverjho toth- ptooe of Moraatta fcnMerMJ^aUm lighted it, and mid: “Pam around the cigars, gentlemen. —New York World. PIECES BALSAM A. Logan waa tbe author, and Tara An- derera waa himeelf. General Logan wrote the took ia 1884 and tbe following year. Be began It while be was ra tbe Republican ticket with Blaine aa a candidate for vice pres ident. When he appeared at fee capital of Illinois, December, 1884, to take per sonal charge of h to campaign for re-elee- tira to tbe senate, he Was engaged put- ting tbe fintohing touches to hto manu script. After midnight, whan his rooms at tbs Leland hotel were cleared of vis- itom, General Logan ent down at hto deek and wrote upon this etoryef the •“PP”»* <b,*lr to bi» coimumpH n who ar-only uftrr ■SB£•»•••U •/CBiarrt. For olarrh ore KyiOm Salm. Bad, lamadw* are piea«- Ml tonaa. Ciaaat Bala*,Mo C u UU; pfmoia ■LT B 0THBB4.M Warm UL, Naw York. PUT! 13 TI MIEI TaUor-aiade, tulahcd and a jpllcatlon will and direction* Uulform* and MiHiUS U1ÏHK URUf. Huuli, IKUI •♦AMERICAN" cracy. He afterward required the suum pledge from hto pabltobers, andthese- oret has boen well guarded from that day ÎÏPE KIMS' co. General Logan told those who were honored with hto orafidence that all the *^*"**.,“!d 1« W» book w«e actual occurrences. He regarded the story more as an autobiography than anything elae. The framework of tbe story wra imag inary, but its substance was drawn from General Logan's own experience and otaervatiraa The Inscription ra tbe fly leaf wwaafaUews: - “Uncle Daniel" i* toneaateil to the public i A truthful pietar., 1m«i .pe. to. .... P»to«tw ef Self-Spadeg Type. Seto Makers ef Capper-Alley Type. - filmin MfTtiiB mor H. S. MOULS SIS O— s reia » BPB, POBTLÄHD, OK Thi. Memo Ie dcdloatml*to tbe Union aol <!lcr» end tb.lr children an exceedingly heavy demand on tbe Upited Statee trearary for 1 rant piece« Tine demand to not confined to any one tominercial center, tat comes alike from all oeotione of tbe country. Treasury of ficials attribute it to the growing cus tom in dry goods establishments and Other business bouses of marking down prices from round figures, which prac tice naturally requires a good supply of pennies for making change. Prior to its adoption the 1 cent piece rat a very; email figure in ordinary chopping trans actions. Although tbe demand has been gener al for the lari two months, it bra teen oonopiraoualy heavy of late in the case of Chicago and St Louis, and the the ory to advanced that thia special demand is due to tbe availability of tbe 1 cent piece for the purchase of local newepa- pe»a. The stock of pennies in the eub- trearariee at Chicago and St Louis was nearly exhausted a week ago, and it wae found neneorary to rail upon an other mbtrearary for aactotanoe in feat The author, Me* Tort. Jan. L MM. In order to craraal hto identity and to BToid pointed references to prominent I men in military and dvil life General Logan changed geographical and proper names to suit hto purpose, although nearly always leaving « elew to bis I meaning. The story to told by Uncle Daniel after tbe close of tbe war, and this Uncle Daniel in real life was Dan iel McCook, father of the famous fami- I ly of McCook boys, who entered the I army from Obia—Boston Journal. - The other day a proposal was made at a pariah meeting for the lighting of the village of Godshill, isle of Wight, with eight lamps, which, it seemed, could be maintained at the modest cost of a half penny rate once every three yean. Up rose a farmer named Hollis to oppora the revolutionary scheme. To the mind of this worthy man its authors were “wanting to turn night into day." “It would set a bad example to the young," be continued, "keeping them rat all hours of the night What they ought to do was to gte a good example by going to bed early and getting up early, and he would 1 again. ”—L Allcock’s ES ..as ™ ewe af the host ef cadaterfeiUind imi tations to aa good aa the genuine. Wk Ml 4 wane Mypeillri« If the story told by Mra George Paltridge of Ann Arbor to true, George to a bold, bad Bvongali. Mra Paltridge wm formerly Mias Mary Lurfleld, a popular young lady of feat city. She war engaged to marry a student named Weir in tbe taw department In tbe bill for divaroe ahe claims that ra Sept 3, 1898, Paltridge took tar to Ypsilanti, hypnotised tar and compelled her to many him under tbe name of Wary French. Then, the alleges, be took tar The treasury department is doing its to Katamaaoo and maltreated bar. Ten best to meet the demand, and for the days later she returned to Mr father’s last two months the mint at Philadel home in Ann Arbor, and bow seeks a phia has kept three presses constantly divorce.—Chicago Timm-Herald. in operation for the exclusive coinage WM ABM POUOHBD BT ABB ABB of 1 cent pieces. The daily output has been 100,000 pieces, of the value of $1,800. The government apparently de- riyes a profit of $1,800 a day on this coinage, the seigniorage being at the rate of nearly 80 per cent of the face value of the coins. This profit disap pears, of course, when the coins are re deemed. It is estimated that there are 780,000,000 1 cent pieces outstanding. —Washington Star. The death of A lexandre Dumas recalls a story relating to hto birth which in Paris has become historical: • When tbe elder Dumas wdi still a very young man, he was wretchedly poor. He hired a garret in a cheap Paris lodginghouse. The first night be was in tbe bouse be was groping hto why up stairs when suddenly his match went out. He stumbled along in the darkneac flight by flight until, just as be reached the eighth floor, a little sowing woman who had been burning the midnight tal low opened her door and, bolding be> caudle above her bead, said: “You are the new lodger, aren’t you! I will show you the way to your room." Dumas moved from tbe lodging bouse very soon after that, and fee little sew ing woman went with him. Subsequent ly she became fee mother of Alenntfte Dumas fils.—New York Sun. FLOUR MILLS...SAW MILLS MINING MACHINERY... Willam«t+P FroÄrtc IRON WORK QFMt kw IT 18 IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT.** TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO 1896 SEED Mt nirt Str^t ...PORTLAND, OR. A Watch— for Nothing MNT POSTPAID IN EXCKAliOK FOB NM> OMJF01I8, on, tr vaa raMtrca. 4 - FOB • COUPONS AO $L0O tW CASH. BLACKWELL’S GENUINE DURHAM TOBACCO. fonate of L-N«w York Bum Buell Lamberson ••• naty Sant tor •*•... Marahall Grande rai The Tobacco victim of the d Boston W« b M » tuttua* »ud for tm*, coniauip- a will Invariably published interviews in sett defense. All efforts to idsntity the author proved Finally be called in a number of friends whose ad vice ae to ths literary merits of hto effort he craved. Wife characteristic bluntuess General Logan She to said to be the only sovereign asked them to tell him frankly whether who ever intrusted the royal person in a or not be wae making a fool of himself balloon, ineieting upon making the first by writing eueb a story. Hs especially ascent while a detachment of royal en- wanted to know if be waa too aevere in mili hie criticiems upon public bmxl Gen- of celebrating themselves their frater nal union and the return of brotherhood to every part oT our land. It to because this to the special pur pose of the projected gathering in the ase hundred and twentieth year of the nett wrote some time ago to General George Moorman, adjutant general and ■ thief of staff of the United Confederate - Veterans, of which organ!ration Gen- * erill John B. Gordon ia command« in Sarsaparilla The Oue True Blood PeriSey. All draniat»; IL FWnl eeiyW 0. L Hood 4 Co.. Lowell,Maw. > get di LIVER PULS