The Aiken recorder. [volume] (Aiken, S.C.) 1881-1910, January 01, 1892, Image 6
iat will
It will cry
that will
they have
_ lin and stab it
le will open the
ier companion was
out her arm from
^wl and say, with al
ienee: “Give me back
ke back my protector!
myall! Him of the kind
le words and the manly brow,
ick to me. 1 ” And then the
obese and filthy, will push back
1 locks and thev will say: “Put
Put her out!” Oh! self-righteous
ithout God you are in peril. Seek
im to-day. Amid the ten thousands
ions of life taere is no safety for a
[lout God.
ay be acTdressmg some who have
y, and so I assault that other
that the dissolute cannot be re-
^grhaps you have only gone a
.While I speak are you
ere a voice within you say-
you do that for? Why did
[iat did you mean by that?”
L in your soul that makes
1 ‘ only knows all our
|>u have gone so far as to
ad have gone through the
'I invite you back this
waits for you. “Rejoice!
i in thy youth, and let thy heart
l the days of thy youth; but
(iat for all these things God will
Ito judgment.”
young man, to your father's
\home, young man, to your
Oh! I wish that all the bat-
could to-day be unlim-
those influences which are
any of our young men. I
r a trumpet of warning,
ids whole audience would
le against the evils of
of us be disheartened.
jers, my heart is high
^k horizon is blooming
rhich prophets spoke,
[have da^n^d, and of
1 sketgf^^^H^® world’s
is will
;ent, and
ame the
Twhich the
■ the grand
stead of the
tree, and
J come up the
i and the hills
Tging, and all the
; clan their hands.
BARBED WIRE.
Which Investor Kil
ls Great Fortune.
ig I saw in a jour-
is the old-fashioned
flvania, Ohio, East-
southern Michigan.
)t to permit the
tented 200 years
ibly enoughJaUm*
|n wasted'Tn the
rarffiiences in
fifty national debts
ces one almost weep
backs that have
the hands worn
sapped, the boys
-in felling trees,
^ving posts, laying
inds of miles of
Western farmer
I he buys a few posts
5d wire. Three men
mile of fence in a
?nce costs complete
all—25 cents. A
fcposts $80! If the
of growing tim-
could not hire a
)o posts alone for
ly nothing of the
;ar how Ellwood,
i, of DeKalb, 111.,
isked one of my
WHITTIER’S BIRTHDAY.
The Aged Poet Spends It Qnietly With
a Friend at Newburyport, Mass.
m
JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.
John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet,
celebrated his eighty-fourth birthday in
Newburyport, Mass., at thehomeof Harriet
Livermore, the schoolmistress of “Snow
Bound.” It is now occupied by Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Cartland, with whom he has
spent nearly three-fourths of the past year,
in Newburyport and at the mountains.
Mr. Whittier is an early riser, and that
morning he came down to breakfast at the
regular time, declaring he felt better than
usual, although he was a little afraid that he
mignt not be able to stand the fatigue of the
occasion. With him for the day were
his two nieces from Portland, Me., Mrs.
Berry and Mrs. S. T. Pickard, who was
accompanied by her husband, the editor of
the Portland 2 ranscript.
As the venerable poet dreads anything in
the nature of ceremony earnest efforts were
made to prevent any public receptions, but
a number of relatives and intimate friends
called, and those ho seemed very glad
to see. He also received the Hav
erhill Whittier Club, as he could
not find it in his heart to refuse,
for everything relating to the home of his
boyhood touches him deeply, and the fa. there
and mothers of some of this club were his
old school fellows and playmates.
There was one unusually interesting feat
ure in the morning’s reception, and that
was the reunion of old schoolmates. With
the party which left Haverhill in a special
car at 8:15 a. m. came three gray
headed persons who had been to school
with Mr. Whittier in the pictur
esque old school-house at East Haverhill.
These were James H. Carleton, of Haver
hill; Mrs. Warren Ordways, nee Caroline
Foote, of Bradford, and Thomas B. Gar
land, of Dover, N. H. The club brought an
extremely pretty floral gift.
A unique souvenir was that sent by the
teachers and pupils of the public schools in
West Point, Calaveras County, Cal.
From the ladies of Winchester, Va., came
a paper cutter made of wood from Fort Lou
don. which was built in that place by George
Washington in 1755.
Floral gifts were everywhere. All day
long messages of congratulation were re
ceived.
The eighty-fourth birthday of the poet
was very generally observed at Amesbury,
Mass. Exercises were held in the public
schools, and in the evening the Whittier
Chautauqua Circle and the Methodist Church
held entertainments in honor of the day.
Mr. Whittier has resided in Amesbury most
of the time since 1836.
WINTER VISITORS KILLED.
Horrible Quadruple
Florida.
Murder in
Miss A. H. Bruce, Master Frank Pack-
wood, Mrs. L. D. Hatch and her son were
found murdered in a house occupied by the
Packwood family on the east coast, six miles
south of New Smyrna, in Volusia County,
Fla.
Their throats were cut. The victims had
apparently been dead for eighteen or twenty-
Some girls students belonging to the
sophomore class of the Lak,c Forest Uni
versity in Chicago, 111., hazed a junior
girl recently, and were 'so rough that
they made her faint. Subsequently the
junio# girls rallied to their comrades
aid and, driving the sophomores into
their rooms, locked ^.hem there.
1
How’af This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any cate of catarrh th at cannot be cured by
taking Hall’s Catarrh i Cur 3.
F. J. Cheney &\Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, nave known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable ifi all business transac
tions, and financially able to carry out any ob
ligations made by theiy firm.
\N est & Trcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
O. .
Waudino, Kinnan <£; Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo! O.
Hall’s Cat arrh Cure i!s taken internally, act
ing directly upon the Wood and mucous sur
faces of the system. 7restimonials sent free.
Price 75c. per bottle. S*old by all druggists.
Entitled ijo the Best.
All are entitled to tibe best that their money
will buy, so eve’-y family should have, at once.
asjt
(hi
Figs, to cleanse 'the system when costive or
bilious. For s*ile in 50c. and gl bottles by all
lealing druggists.
Ladies employed in fashionable stores,whose
duties keep them standing all day,should send
two 2c.stamps to Pinkham Medicine Co.,Lynn,
Mass., for “Guide to Health and Etiquette."
• A King in the Family.
Dr. Hoxsie’s Certain Croup Cure for colda,
coughs, croup and pneumonia has no rival.
Cures without nausea or any disarrangement.
Bold by druggists or mailed on receipt of 50 cts.
Address A.- i J . Hoxie, Buttalo, N. Y.
The Convenience ol bolio Trains,
The Erie is the only railway running solid
trains over its own tracks between New York
and Chicago. No change of cars for any class
of passengers. Rates lower than via. any otner
first-class line.
Dr. Swan’s Pastiles Cure female weaknesse*;
his T-Tablets cure chronic constipation. Sam
ples tree. Dr. bwan, beaver Dam, Wia.
FITS stopped free by Dh. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day’s use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and £2 trial bottle
tree. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
In the “Guide of Health and Etiquette” will
be fotind much useful advice on both sub
jects, this book is sent free for two 2c. stamps,
by the Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
“ Therms something behind it. n
That’s what you think, perhaps,
when you read that the proprietors
of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy offer
$500 reward for an incurable case
of Catarrh. Rather unusual, you
think, to find the makers of a medi
cine trying to prove that they !>••
lieve in it. “There must be soms-
thing back of it! ”
But it’s a plain, square offer, mad#
in good faith. The only thing that*#
back of it is the Remedy. It cure#
Catarrh in the Head. To its mild,
soothing, cleansing and healin*
properties, the worst cases yield,
no matter how bad or of how long
standing. It has a record that
goes back for 25 j'ears. It doesn’t
simply relievo — it perfectly and
permanently cures. With a Rem
edy like this, the proprietors can
make such an offer and mean it.
To be sure there’s risk in it, but
it’s so very small that they ar#
willing to take it.
You’ve “never heard of anything
like this offer?” True enough.
But then you’ve never heard of
anything like Dr. Sage’s Remedy.
CPNH f° rour ll9tof 19Cat-
O ^ ^ aloirs of Music and
'MUSICAL Instruments. W.
Story, 26 Central St., Boston, Maas.
O N APPLICATION and *e. atamp, we aoad aCsSS-
logue which offers nearly 1,000 valuablepremlumala
connection with a new Typewriter of unqnestionea
merit and utility. EMPIRE CO’Y. 18 Reade Street. N. T!
ST, JACOBS OIL,
FOR HORSE AND CATTLE DISEASES.
CURES
Cuts, Swellings, Bruises. Sprtins, Gall, Strains, Lameness. Stiff,
ness. Cracked Heels, Scratches, Contractions. Flesh Wounds, I
Strinq'ialt. Sore Throat, Distemper, Colic. Whitlow, Poll Evil, I
Fistula, Tumora, Splints, Ringbones, and Spavin In their early [
Stages. Diections with each bottle.
DISEASES OF HOGS.
d»-GENERAL DIRECTIONS.—Use freely in the hogswill. I
If they Vi'.l not eat, drench with milk into which a small |
[ quantity of the Oil is put.
DISEASES OF POULTRY.
GENERAL DIRECTIONS.—Saturate a pill of dough, or I
bread, with St. Jacobs Oil and force it down the fowl s throat, f
DR. TALMAGE’S “LIFE OF CHRIST.
99
Covering hi* great trip To, Through, and from the Chriet-Land. Illustrated with over 400 wonder
ful engravings, also a grand picture of Jerusalem on the day of the cracifliion, in 12 colors sue ten feet in,
‘ ** r ‘ ntory. No capital needed. BIG FAY. Also send names and P. O. of 8 agents or those
ont of work and get Talmage’s Illustrated Biography FRKK.
Address HISTORICAL PUB. CO., Phila. Pa.
length! Excfiisive territory. No capital neede
lOOO AGENTS WANTED.
“German
Syrup”
“ We are six in fam-
AFarmer at ily. We live ijc~a
Edom,Texas.P^ c f-^|
Cold ^
pRTOBlAs