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About The Lump City Miner (Lump City, Mont.) 1895-1895 | View This Issue
The Lump City Miner (Lump City, Mont.), 13 July 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/2014252004/1895-07-13/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
4 1 t, Li ,t e o e a 18 18 lOi .e. ti 1 1 N re he Is - at )le of en of Si11 .ng re - aid de- ac - the the the rot. nth Ind eat tat say Lion ) ows the era. t Air r tfI , r t t hat ‚H III11•0 14 mud Iln- COMM its. OTHERS l ee l recovering from the illnee at- tending child- birth, or who suf- fer from the ef- fects of disorders, derangements and displace- ments of the wo- manly organs, will find relief and a permanent cure in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Taken during pregnancy, the \ Prescription \ FLAKES CHILDBIRTH EASY by preparing the system for parturition, thus assisting Nature and shortening \labor.\ The painful ordeal of child- bizth is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both mother and child. The period of con- finement is also greatly shortened, the mother strengthened and built up, and an abundant secretion of nourishment for the child promoted. Elegant in Design .re Superior in Workmanship Strong and Easy Running Hartfords are the sort of bi- cycles most makers ask $100 for. Columbias tte far superior to so-called \specials for whicia $125 or even $150 is asked. It is well to be posted upon the bicycle price situation. The great Columbia plant is work- ing for the rider's benefit, as usual. Co1umbias,s100 POPE MFG. CO. •OISTON NOW YORK SAW FRANCISCO PROYIPSNOS BUFFALO The Columbia Catalogole, a work of highest art, telling of sud picturing clearly all the new Chlumbisa and Hartfords, t. free from any Columbia Agent, or is mailed for two 2 -coat staalieta. General Offices and Factories, HARTFORD, C.enn. Meta Wheel for your Wagon Kay eim you wont lie to 14 tucker high. Pirko I to • M- elee wide— hubs to et any axle Saves Coat m • n y eimes in • sea. son to ha, ret et low wheels te fit your wagon forhaulling grain,fedder, man he g l, Cr_ No resettingU of rea thiitl' or free Addren /M 11111111 Empire fg. t'o.. P. 0. Box 1.3, yuincy Ill. DROPS TREATED FRICE. Positively Cured with N'egetable Rimmed -lee Have cured thiontands ut \Ragan Cure en110,4 pro- nounced hopelew by best ph vniclans. Front first lose my mphirni disappear: In ten I,.in at least Dr.. third, •r rn ptArn• removed bend for free hook teilit Iwo• I 8 t miraculous cure. Tim days' tree.rneet If you order trial vend lOr to ›iamps ti pay postage mu order trial return this ad••rtlreement to un. f°4 EWIS' 98 % LYE L POWDZ12D .11TD P23317X1D (PATINTID) The si remold and puree Lys made. Unlike other Lye. It being a line powder and pocked In a can with removable lld, the nontente are always ready for nee Will make the best perfumed liard In '20 minute* without tweVing. J11 the beet for cleansing waste p pee. dleinteetIng sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees. eta PENNA. SALT M'F'G CO. Gen, Agents.. Phila.. Pa. THIN liTIIIIIAL1/ USED LOCALLY eureri the 1h- Is ITIO alt cured thou. anda slave and will Um,-., you. Semi for free book, and yl teerie bleak. by mall, g. n. SR IPOCES' Mai omit co . 111 CAXT011 Cagan I' 1 , TlIgg.•11 , 1 NEW SNORT LINE TO 1111V - Kindly Mention This Peter When Yee ' Write to An Adeerteter. WHO NOW SHINE IN THE LITER- ARY WORLD. The KetiotrIttatrie .. Iliseovery\ of (lrace King l'y hurl... Dudley Warne' — Brilliant Owner of a Well-known raper Daughters of Virginia. (Richmond Correspondence.) Z — 1 HERE WAS AN - 1- untold wealth of material for liter- ary work in the south after the war and the adapt- able southerners used it. Instead of telling their stories to each other they sold them in the open\ market for the world to enjoy. Miss Grace King ot New Orleans il- lustrates the point exactly. She tells a story of the Crescent city with such subtle building up of detail, such hum- or, such delineation of characters pe- culiar to the south, that New Orlenas people can never be made to believe that the northerner ever really under- stands them. She has told stories for years, never thinking of her gift as anything more than as an amusement for her friends. One n1gnt at a dinner party her host was entertaining Charles Dudley Warner and Miss King sat near him. In the course of conver- sation she told a pathetic little tale of the devotion of an old negrese to a white child. It astonished and delight- ed Mr. Warner, who asked Miss King If she had ever written anything for publication, and offered if she would RUTH M'ENERY STUART. write out her little story as she had told it to him to attend to its publica- tion. It opened the doors of the mag- azines to her work and put her in the first rank of American story -tellers. Miss King was educated a ong the Creoles, although she bel nged to a Georgia family. Her father ..was a prominent lawyer In New Orleans and It was his encouragement that devel- oped the story -telling gift of which she has made so much. Mrs. E. J. Nicholson, the owner of the Picayune and its editorial chief, combines in a remarkable way the qualities of a genuine poetess and of -a successful business woman. She was Miss Eliza Poltevent, the daüghter of an old Huguenot family, and her child- hood was spent on the Pearl river, from which she has taken the rather romantic pseudonym of \Pearl Rivers.\ While still a young girl ‚he joined the staff of the Picayune as literary ed- itor, shortly afterward marrying the owner, Col. Holbrook. Finding herself at his death in possession of a political paper heavily burdened with debt she succeeded in bringing It to a firm place among the newspapers of the countiy. Her marriage to Mr. Nicholson, who is the business manager of the Picayune, has given her leisure for literary work and for brilliant social life. Three of the best known of the Vir- ginia writers are cousins, after a faith- kn. Thomas Nelson Page, Miss M. G. McClelland, and Mr'. Amelle Rives Chanler all belong to the oldest and most aristocratic families In America. As the story goes, after the name of Mr. Page had become well known to the public he was called to Cantle Hill, the historic old home of the Rives fam- ily, built at the beginning of the last century on the original royal grant, to pass upon the work of his beautiful young relative, Amelle Rives. She was hardly 20, but she did a number of things unusually well, fro riding horseback to painting portraits. Her father, Col. Rives, who was one ô the engineers of the Panama canal, her to a governees when she was a child with instrtictione that she was to study what she 'Chose. Mr. Page took up her manuscript indulgently, expect- ing to find schoolgirl crudities. Fie found \The Brother to Dragons,\which made a genuine sensation when It was published. Unfortunately this still remains the best work of its author. Her next lot of stories were fairly good, and then she wrote \The Quick or the Dead.\ Today that brief novel might attract attention. and It might not. It was the first in the list of hysterical stories, to which \A Yellow Aster,\ \A Super - Auntie Woman,\ and dozens of others belong. Its author originated the type in this country, but compared with Its companions her novel is mild. indeed. Miss Rive' married Mr John Arm- pirong ('tinnier. II well known member or the Astor family, and has mince spent orei' of her time abroad. living for It time In Wile. de Pompadour's chateau In nee. Mien Jolla Magruder Is another Vir- ginia girl who hoe written several en- iert•Ining at orie• '• er,ilt• the rhillSyn - wee her greatest sw , pea«. and It owpd much of its Popularity to its delicate r: , .i. mor. But in humor no woman and few men have surpassed Frances C..iurtenay Baylor. Every Baylor is a '/IrgInian, wherever born, and It was a mere acci- dent which made Arkansas the birth- place of the author of \an Both Sides,\ and Texas her early hoine.,,Since 1573 es • ?\\ she has lived in Virginia. Ml BaYl°r is always clever, and her view o ife is urnueing. whether she is writing for children or for the most dignified adult Publication. Molly Elliot Seawell is another of the descendants of a long line of dignified Virginian ancestors. Miss Seawell wrote under several naines before she produced something that she considered worthy to go over her own signature. This \something\ was her celetigated short story, \Maid Marian,\ which was dramatized for Rosina Yokes, and was the last new play she acted. Another comedy of Miss Seawell'a, \Uncle Mau- rice,\ is to be put on the stage by Fred- erick Bond next season. Her near neighbor and intimate friend, at her I present home in Washington, is Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett; and, like the latter, she has made essays into juve- nile literature, turning out two delight , fui naval stories for boys. Miss Seawell might have written her stories from anywhere, but that is not true of the greatest woman writer in the South, Miss Mary Murfree, who is best known as Chartes Egbert Crad- dock. Her work urea published by a well-known Boston editor fond several years before he discovered that she was not a man. Her handwriting is very heavy and black, and It was Mr. - Them- es Bailey Aldrich's joke to say, \I won- der if Craddock has taken in his winter supply of ink and cari let me have - a, se- rial.\ One day a card came to Mr. Al- drich bearing the well-known name in the well-known writing, and the editor rushed out to greet his old contributor, expecting to see a sturdy Tennessee mountaineer. When a. slight, delicate little woman arose to answer his greet- ing, it is said that Mr. Aldrich put his hands before his face and simply spun around without a word, absolutely be- wildered by astonishment. Every year almost adds a new name to the South's list of literary workers. TO GEN. RUSK. The Monument Lately nyelled at Viroqua, Wis. (Viroqua Correspondence.) The stone which marks the last rest- ing place of General Rusk is like the man whose career it commemorates— plain, strong and towering. It is placed in the center of the double family lot, towering high over all the others in the inclosure. On the heavy molded base is the family name, \Rusk in raised, polished letters. Above this is a die block with polished tablets on the four sides, on the front or east one of which is engraved an epitome s of Gen- eral Rusk's public career, as follows: JEREMIAH McLAIN RUSK. • Born June 17, 1820. • Died I4ov. 21, 1893. Entered U. S. Vol. Army July, 1862, as Major of 25th Wis. infantry. \For gallant and meritorious service during the war,\ and \For conspicuous gal- lantry at the battle of Salkehatchie, S. C., was brevetted colonel and briga- dier -general of the U. S. ole., March, 1865.\ Bank comptroller of Wisconsin, 186$- 1870. Member of the 42d, 43d and 44th con. greases. THE RUSK MONUMENT. Governor of Wisconsin, 1832-1U1, U. a Secretary of Agriculture, 1886 1893. This die is- surmounted by a shaft 26 feet long, making the height of the en- tire monument 33 feet. The en”re monument is on the obelisk order and is made of gray Vermont granite. On the aide of the shaft above the die Is a bronze shield, crossed swords and a pen with the motto \Kön sfbr sed \not for himself, but for his country.\ Of Ali the Thirty-Seven the One By -the - Sea I. the Oldest., New England is to have another sum- mer pageant which bids fair to surpass the Coaching parade of North Conway, the illuminated festivities of Bar Har- bor, or the Newport yachting carnival. Manchester-by-the-Bea,derisively called \Manchester -by -the -Boston and Maine Depot\ by the outer world. is to cele- brate with unique ceremonies the 250th anniversary of the landing of John Winthrop upon their shores. This eple- bration is to be held on Thursday, July IR. The whole day will be.mpent in an artistic spectacular production of the acene enacted here hundreds of years ago when John Winthrop, first goy- arn..r of Mannachneetta Ray roilonr. aellPd Into the Inner hdrher of what le ro , 10 Mancheeter, and with his graft landed on the bleach, where hp we. kindly re. ed by the Indian SUge- Inorea. who ir•at• - ell him to 'Ira is« , rrieg *I * * * * * * * • * * COOK BOOK FREE. • Every housekeeper wants to know the best • things to eat, and how to prepare them. \The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook.\ * Contains One thousand useful recipes for • * every kind of cooking. Edited by Prof. fe Rudmani, New-York Cooking School. * Free by mail. Address (writing plainly), et' mentioning this paper, ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. • 106 WaIl Street, N. Y. * * * * et -i -e et*** 4•11 , et. ft• tit She Made Him Tired. \John said Mrs. Billus, \what is the salary of an alderMan?\ think it it $3 for each meetin \And yet there seems to be plenty e! men willing to take the place at that pitiful salary. How hard the times must be when strong, able- bodied men, willing to work, no doubt,and capable of filling far high- er stations in life are driven to the necessity of taking just such jobs! 1 am sure we ought to be very thank- ful John, that you haven't felt the pressure of the hard times to the ex- tent of that, and—\ - Maria,\ said Mr. Billus, looking fixedly at ber over his newspaper, -you make me very weary.\ Another /form of riloslostlon. imid Little Girl—What is it they come here to buy„when a man's been Out late and—and been excited, you know, and feels bad next morn- ing' Druggist—They usually call for bromide or something of that kind. Timid Little Girl --I guess that's what I want Give me a dime's worth. Papa was up nearly all night arguile about infant baptism With the minister. Queen Victoria's Scotch for ost her about $25,000 a year or travelling •xpenses. e S. K. COBURN, Mgr., Claris , Scott wrlteit \I LA Beira Catarrh Cure a %alhable reuxedy.\ Dai'fstiisU it, no. Some of Jerrold's Witty Remarks. On the first night of the represen- tation of one of Jerrold's pleces,a suc- cessful adapter (corn the French ral- lied him on his nervousness. \I\ said the adapter, -never feel ner- vous on the first night of mv pieces.\ \Ah my boy,\ Jerrold replied, -you are always certain of suceess. Your pieces have all been tried before.\ He was seriously disappointed with a certain hook written by one of his friends. This friend heard that Jerrold had expressed his dis- appointment, and questioned him. -I hear you said -- was the worst book lever wrote.\ -No, I didn't.\ came the answer; \I said it was the worst book anybody over wrote.\ -- —Of a mistaken philanthropist. Jerrold said he was \so benevolent, so merciful a man—ho would have hold an umbrella over a dock in a shower of rain.\ -Argonaut Beeman's Pepsin Gum. THE PERFECTION OF CHEWING GUM. A Delicious Remedy Per all Form\ ot INDIGLSTION. CAUTION be that the name Iteeman lé On each wrapper. Each tablet contains On. graln pure pepsin if the gum cannot he obtained from dealer.. send I cente in stamps for gamine package to BEEMAN CHEMICAL VO., 78 liana St., Vieeeland, O. Originators of Pepsin Chewing llum. ! Very Latest Styles May ; Y lanton ell Coot Potteries. for 10 Cent.. When time compels Below là Hema. Aise Mae S\ liSt Tr VP wt.. vte. FI L he, PI And I n I\ 81 r • e. 4321 nee shoe, •/. H, H Ik, U and Inrhee ',Iran ‚omen,* H Na SUN FIY• dew. en FS, SS M. FS n•h•• w•l•t m•a•nrie M pre SIM Olen 110 and IF F RAYS 1111/,M1 rt•• . II. M, 16. III sad BB 1•Notlee hurt MI..11111r• e RIS ivo v\..e Feat with AA eyrie, far we AY Any ef Ih• aheYe III , 4441 DIFFF•FFIA FII ewitifted Ina et ,ento en Nutt ••trarn arderwl, mildew, eoeli pattern eeet emir I • leemte. ne• reef •/I.A f/sr r oytago for we% pa ewer. Glév• unwire at hashes vralatt measure re, skirl. awl numb... of Inehee bow meowsre He 1•11/060. •adreera