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ss Go coger A GREAT CAREER. The Remarkabte Rise and Pro- gress of Grover Cleveland. Henry Watterson in tke Louisville Courier- Journal Mr. Cleveland will enter upon his | second term of office under circum- | stances and conditions which it is| not superlative to call extraordinary. He has broken ail -known records. | He has baffled every prediction. He| the first presidential candidate | nominated by a national convention over the protest of a united delega-} tion from his own state. He is the]; first defeated occupant of the white house to be returned to it. That his! nomination against the formidable opposition in New York ard else-| where was a perilous adventure, h himself foresaw and foreshadowed; and his election in this despite and by an overwhelming popular major- ity, even where he seemed weakest, contributes to history a startling cxample cf the saying at tributed to Talleyrand, that “it is the impossible which happens.” The antecedent career of Mr. Cleveland was itself exceptional. That, within a period of less than five years the sheriff of a county should be hurried from sheriff to mayor, from mayor to governor and from governor to president, seemed a fairy tale. “I sometimes wake in the middle of the night,” said the hero of this fairy tale a few weeke after he had entered the white house | “and am unable to realize that Iam here; it appers to me all a dream.’ And yet the sequel is even more sur- prising. Under our peculiar system of gov- ernment, where all things are open to all men, the sudden rise from ob- scurity and the quick passage to fame and fortune of the humblest citizen is not much to be wondered at, except in degree; though in such matters it is as easy for the specula- tiye mind to deal in hundreds as in units. But tbe loss of place and power is rarely, if ever, followed by their recovery; and the return of Mr. Cleveland at the head of an ad- vancing and triumphaut column of irresistible democrats, after the de- feat of 1888 and an interim of four years, marked by nothing revolu- tionary or out of the common, has no parallel in American annals, if in any annals. And so, good fortune attend you, Mr. President, and those whom you may call to your side; good fortune as democrats, good fortune as Amer- icans; a wet sheet and a flowing sea, and a wind that follows fast sail out of the Straits of Tarifa, in- fested by pirates, to the ocean high- way which is to lead us_ back to the only true American policy, the great- est good to the greatest number. at- tainable solely through the guaran. tee of the rights of all, privileges tonone! + political as we exclusive: Kate Field's Washington says Now that the result of tie election is known, and it is settled beyond a doubt that Mrs. Cleveland will re- turn to preside over the White house all incidents of her life are of inter- est. It is not generally known that her engagement ring was not the valuable diamond which Mr. Cleve- land presented to her upon her re- turn from Europe a few days befére her marriage. Before her departure with her mother upon the European journey the president-elect visited New York for the purpose of saying farewell to his fiancee. It was then decided to keep the engagement from the public until her return, when almost simultaneously with the announcement would come the marriage. wish that no regular engagemen ring should be given until that time, as during her trip abroad she pre- | ferred to wear a seal ring which! had belonged to her father, and up-| on his death had been given to his most intimate friend, Mr. Cleveland. | This plan was accordingly carned | Denver, Col, It was Mrs. Cleveland's | KIT CARSON CONVICTED. i A Son the Famous Scout Will Serve a| in Prison. i | Dee. career of Kit Carson, the only surviv- | Term 1.—The wild |ing son of the famous scout, was for | awhile today when a jury renened| 2 verdict against him of assault with | intent to commit murder. For years | past he has been a terror to this | ;community. Whenever he was un | der the intluence of liquor he always went gunning for somebody on some} imaginary grievance, but was always lueky in escaping without serious ip-! jury. This is the third time that he has been on trial for shooting with-) Twice he has been it seemed that the} was conclusive of There was great difficul- ty in securing this jury as most of the jurymen admitted they were | biased in favor of defendant. Th e| prosecuting attorney almost hopeless of securing a jury that would convict the young desperado. A feeling of relief now prevails in the community. The jury were warmly congratulated by the court and prosecuting attorney, aud by in the past year. acquitted evidence adduced his guilt when was business men generally, but the young bloods of the community are loud in their npathy with the conviet. The crime of which he was convicted was for shooting at an in- offensive stranger and compelling) him to dance. The Diseases of Inebriety. North American Review Statistics of persons arrested for inebriety, extending over long peri- ods, all points to certain years in to which a maximum in numbers | was reached, followed by a retrogade movement back toaminimum. This tide like movement is sometimes clear, then obscure. Often it is marked by both epidemic and endem- ic waves and is traced in the prev- alence of ivebriety in towns and cities and in the reaction noted by temperance revivals. This psycho Icgical ebb and flow was pointed ont by Dr. Wesphal in Sweden many years ago and an interval of seven- teen years was indicated as the time between the maximum and minimum periods of inebricty in that country. Shorter periods have been noted by other observers in different cour- tries. Many very startling point to this wonderful cycle and drink orbit and help to explain the strange temperance revivals which spring up and sweep over the coun- try, dying away with the same m tery and suddenness. Such move- ments are undoubtedly the backward swing of high t The histories of towns supply many startling con- facts s tides of inebriety. | large cities aud firmatory facts of periods of inebri ety and intense temperance revivals | following each other with a strange fascinating mystery. Like the ebb and flow in politics, religion and the great social movements, these drink cycles or waves point to ranges of causes and conditions awaiting fu- ture discovery. While many of the causes of inebriety as seen in the in- dividual are both preventable and curable, there are other unknown psychological and physica! forces that control the form and direction of the inebriety of both Whatever inebriety is in Europe, or | may have been in the past, it i | this country a brain ease marked by mental and phy failure, exhaustion and centr: ES sexes. ix and nerve dis- ical de- Mrs. Annie Beasant arrived in New York last week and will lecture fon theosophy through the country. Near Carrollton, Ga., two white men were beaten nearly to death by whitecaps for assaults on little girls. Senator R. L. Gibson of Louisiana, |is much worse, and his death is mo- mentarily expected. Heis at Hot Springs, Ark. The Wa arner Observatory at Roch-j out and until her return to New York the president's wife had never! worn an engagement ring. The first | one she possessed set with this | stone was given her immediately | upon landing from the steamer by a} cousin living in New York, who hur- j ried down to Tiffny’s and purchas- | ed the small diamond. star which | Mrs. Cleveland generally wears upon} ' her little finger. | jester, N. Y¥., may be moved, and} Springfield, Mo., has begun effort | to secure its location there. A Great Surprise | Is in store for all who use Kemp's Bal - | jsam for the throat and lungs, ‘the. great | Not guaranteed remedy nerits and any druggistis author proprietor of this wondertul dy to give you asample bottle tree. It never fails to cure acute or chroni }coughs. Al druggists sell Kemp’s Bai sam. Large bottles sec and $1. ed by |the end.’ jour sentiments. —Boonville | service as a drummer boy in the war jof 1812. | decea: Jokers’ Target Company. Every woman who marries be- !comes a sort of amateur detective — | Atchison Globe. About ali the drunkard | jhas to support him is a lean on a |lamp-post.—Dallas News. The ascent of the balloon is ger- jerally a soar poiut with the aeronaut. | j;—Binghauteu Leader. The man who does wot comb hair laoks best with a chrysauthe- mum in bis button hole —Picayune. The mariner who scours the seas average Lis in all sorts of weather needs a great | deal of sand.—Lowell Courier. “My wife gets so jealous without cause. Does yours?” “No; not with out cause “—Philatelphia Record. Teacher—What is a Boy—It’s a word you place of another when you don't know how to spell the other ove The Million synonym! can Perhaps the strongest advocate of | au extra session is the man whose best girl's parents bo'd him down to one call per week. “Never miud, old boy. has his day.” “But I didu’t havea day. She broke the cuescement) eighteen hours aft Detroit Tribune “Our gardener good villian in a melodrama.” so?” young it was ma le.” would) make “Because he is always laying out plots that amount to nothing in —Boston Gs azette. A Sensible Man Would Ha Kemp’s Balsam for the throat and lungs. It is curing more cases of coughs, colds, asthma, bronchi tis, croup and all throat and lung trou le than any other medicine. The proprie tor has avthonized any druggist to give you a sample bottle free to convince you ot the merit ot this great remedy. Large | bottles 0c and $1. We licked before this. Not us individually, by our own self, e been but us in connection and in copjunce) HARPE tion with our party. We have been getting licked in Missouri lo! these many years. And yet, with our ex- tensive and comprehensive ence in this line, we can’t say rea'ly, that we enjoyed getting licked. We don’t like it. We feel just as tle ol 1 man did wher, after Le had been | suffering excrutciating torture from the toothache for several hours and ali the remedies suygested and used on Lim by his faithful wife proved of no avail, she said: Well, all I ean; I you'll have to grin and bear it experi-| John, Dve Jone old man replied, just efter that tooth | gave a throb that made bis hair curl: | use in| Every dog | “Why | had} guess | The| 1893. Harper's Magazine. ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Magazine 43 will continue to main n the unrivaled standard of excellence which has characterized it from the beginning. Among the notable features of the year there Will be pew novels by A Conan Boyle Con stance Fenimore Woolson, and William Black Short stories will be contributed by the most popular writers of the day, including Mary E Wilkins, Richard Harding Davis, Margaret Deland, Brander Matthews, and many others The illustrated descriptive papers will em- brace articles by Jalian Ralph on new south- = and western subjects; by Theodore Child b onitney Bigelow on Russia and Harding Davis o ss nz by Col. T. A. Dodge on E: ern Rivers, ete iwin A Abney’s illustratio: of Shakespeare's Comedies will be continued Liter: articles wi'l be contributed by Chas Elliott Norton, Mrs. Jam. P. Fields, William Dean Howells, Brander Matthews, and others ‘HARPER'S PERIODICALS. PER YRAR. HARPER’S MAGAZINE ai | HAR®ER’S WEEKLY 400 HARP. BAZAR 400 UNG PEOPLE 20 | _ Postage free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The the Num year. When no tim-is mentioned, subserip- lions will begin with the number ‘current at the time « ciptot order. Bound volumes of Harper’s Magazine for three years back, in neat cloth binding, wil! he went by mail, post- pad. on receipt of $3.00 per volume "Cloth tor binding, 50 cents exch—by mail post-paid Remittances should be made by Post-oftice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss Newsvapers are not to copy this advertise- ment without the express order of Harper & | Brothers. Adaress, HARPER & BROTHERS, New York | 1893, Harper's Weekly | ILLUSTRATED. |. Harper’s Weebly is acknowledged aa stand ing first among illustrated weekly periodicals jin America. T) oceupies place between that | of the hurried daily feareane that of the less | timely monthly magazine It includes both | literature and news, and presents with equal force and felicity the real ev 8 of current history and the imaginative themes of fiction ! On account ofits very complete series of illus trations of the World’s Fair, it will be not lonly the best guide to the great Exposition, but also its beat souvenir. Every publicevent of general interest will be fuily illustrated in its pages. Its contributions being from the best writers and artists in this country, it will | continue to excel in literature, news and Mus- ‘trations, all other publications of its class. HARPER'S PERIODICALS for Infants and Children. cures Colic, Constipation, “Castoria is so well adapted to children that 1b, Diarrhoea. Eructation, I recommend it as superior to any prescription kmnowntome." H. A. Ancuen, M.D., 111 So. Oxfer2 St., Brooklyn, N. Y¥. Wit FOR FORTY CENTS You will receive the best (Best Wreekly PAPER IN THE WEST, THE KANSAS GITY WEEKLY TIMES — FROM NOW ‘TILL 40c FOR JAN. Ist, 1893, PER YEAR: | HARPER'S MAGAZINE 3400 °S WEEKLY 4am | HARPER'S BAZAR - 400 | HARPER'S YOUNG PEOP 200 | . Postage Free to ali subscribers in n the United \s | kly begin with the first Numbe ary ofeach year. When | ho time is mention subscriptions will begin | with the number current xt the time of the re- | ceipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Weekly for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent |! mail, post-paid, or by express free of ex- vense, provided the fleight does not exceed { oe dollar per volume, for $7 00 per volume. Cloth Cases for ewch volume, suitable for | binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on Teceip! ot $1 0) each seleuld be made b eror Dratt, to avoid eWspapers ure not to twithont the express « Broth Remitta Post-office nee ef loss. this advertise- der of Harper d OTHERS, New Yors Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. ; | | “Mandy, I may bave to bear it, but} Harper’s Razar is a journal for the home. It : ) para re ves the fullest and latest information about Til be d—d if Vil grin. Them’s | fashions, and its numerous illustrations, Par- lican. Near Arkansas City. Ark., a north- bound train on the Missouri Pacitic | per-| 7 believed, road was ditched and a dozen sons injured, none it is mortally. We'll write it down till every body sees it Till everybody is sick of seeing it Till everybody knows it without that Dr. Sage’s Catarch Remedy | HARPER S of chronic ca- caterrhal head- | in the head.” In| HARPER'S MAGAZINE cures the worst cases tarrh in the head, ache, aud “cold perfect faith, its makers, the World's | HARP! ssociation of | Dispensary Medical : Buffalo, N Y.. offers to pay any one suffering tarrh in the head whom they e.nnot | cure. Now if the conditions were re- versed—if they asked you to pay $500 for a positive cure you might hesitate. with years of honoable dealing; / thousands of dollars and a great | name back of them and they say— | “We can cure you because we've! cured thousands of others like you} —if we can't we will pay you $ for the knowledge that there’s whom we can’t cure.” They believe it themselves. any trial preferable to catarrh? 500 to s one} Dubuque. Ia, Nov. 30.—General George W. Jones, who was once United States senator, now in his 80th year, departed for Washington yesterday to present to congress claims against the government aris ing from his serving in the Black} Be k war and minister to Bogota | junder president Buchanav. Cor- gress last winter pensioned him for Notiee ne Final Seilenene ers int a in Snare of Thos. sie ati, Elmira A Summy, sdmini tratrix of said estate, intend to make final settle reme-| Ment thereof, at the next term ofthe Bates/ county probate court. of Missouri, to be held at nutler on the Lith day | of November, 1802. in Bates county, state ELMIAR A. SUMMY, 9 ‘Administratrix. Here are reputable men | *™e. for $ igus, and pattern sheet supplements are sd pails Gre nsable alike to the home drees-maker | and the:professional modiste. No expense is | spared to make its artistic attractiveness of the |highest order. Its bright stories, amusing ic comedies, and thoughttul essays eatisfy all tastes, and its last page is fam asa budget of witand humor In its we ekiy issues every thing is included which is of interest to women Che Serials for isv3 will be written by Walter Iesant and Edna Lyall. Christine Terhune Herreck wiil furnisii a practical series, en- titled **Atthe Toilet race King, Olive | Thorne Miller, and Canda: heeler will be | frequent contributors. The work of women | in the Columbian Exposition will be fully r | resented with many illustra .. T.W Big | cinson, in +: Women and Mei will please a PERI ypicaLs,| ‘r Year: eeing it— | $1 00 uY 400 HARPER’S BAZAR 400 | HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE 200 Postage free to all subscribers in the United WEE from cbronic ca-| States, Canada and Mexico. | The Voiumes of the Bazar begin with the | first Number of January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin | with the number current at receipt of order | Bound volumes of Harper’s Bazar for three years back. in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid or by expre 8, nesies the freight does not exceed one ii 0 per vol Cloth Cases for exc binding. wiil be sent by mail, | ceipt of $1 6 each Remittances should be n Money Order or Dr Newspapers ara not ment without the ex; Brothers. | Address -paid on re- e by Post-office to avoid chance of loss advertise- f Harper & HARPER & BROTHER®, New York | THE DICTIONARY HOLDER bulous results grew out a to a fabi to Base you ever noticed the wivert otcr Company, which starts out as follows: 45 sold in '88 2.288 sold in ’89 or268 sold in’90 29,049 sold in Bat j Well, that estab! LaVerne W. Ro each eevecman: sa reo eeCeo0768 e 7 : 9 : ACH YOUR DEALER : © FOR THE UMEXCELLED > e eo] e Hunicke Bros. > = mo BULLION «= 2 be HAT. * oe le a Barrett aetes OR THE rel eng baa ie e Hunicke Bros. ln ° mT B.S ro" i> -) HAT. ® | 6 MANUFACTURED SOLELY CY e $ HUNICKE BROS., ST. LOUIS, MO. s eeeseees W.L, DOUGLAS $3 SHO serie, A 3$ sewed shoc that will not rip 3 fins Seamless, smooth inside, flexible, more comfortable, sty! and durable than any ‘other, shoo ever sold. at the pr beice. Equals custom made shoes costing from $4 to 85. he only $3.00 Shoe made with two complete soles, securely sewed at the outside edge (as shown in cut), ‘ngives double the wear of cheap welt shoes sold at th Numne prices . for such eesily rip. having only one sole sewed toa narrow strip of leather on the edg yhen OBce worn through are worthle: ‘The two wol mothe W. Tae DOUGLAS $3.00 Shoe when worn throug! repaired as many times as necessary they w Mitacvesripieciboasa hom teeeaeee rchasers of footwear desiring to econo. ze, should consider the superior qualities: Of these shoes, and not be influenced, to buy cheap welt sh naving only appearan th W. 1. Dot AUTION Beware a without mdthe F pri = 3 He ote betituti re fraud jon by jaw for obe 1 dealers a be or are of the same standard of merit, mo agente We ee ntie lta liner oe enin ta yene piaeeen “ai or if " : pale Tn nce ws ating Kind, size wad width wanted. Postage free, We Ls Douglas, Bre gente coairet and permanently removed with ‘aU E E, the new and wonderful discovery. ee eee H piled on the hand. and on washing afterward it w e hair was completely removed. 5 simple any child can use it. a few minutes, and the hair disappears as if discovery ever attained such wonderful results. been annoyed with hair on their FACE. NE its merits. It cannot fail. If the gro will remove it permanently, the heavy grow hair on moles may require oe or more ap} are destroyed. although all hair will without the slightest pai Young persons wh al > removes or injury when ny find an ing growtn of ha « by jeter with fuit ment ix honest and ou will find every incinnats, Obie. pay very bottle guarantee: ren’s Ants, Ht ent ws ess Qu rletter at any P | lure or slightest injur THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY CROTHERS. 66 Warren tt. New York. Price so ct an That dreaded and dreadful diseasel SSS What shall stay its ravages? Thousands pif say Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian cod liver oil and hypophosphites of lime and soda has cured us of consumption in its first stages. Have you a co to consumption? Make no Scott's Emulsion cures ( Coughs, c s, Consumption, Scrofula, aa all Anaemic and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wasting in children. Almost as palatable ax milk. Get onty the gennine. Pre- red by Scott & Downe, Chemists, New &. Seid by all Druggists. te or leading it take ‘Scott's mulsion _ SAMPLE COPIES FREE. ~ “+ sles? asians si vv researc