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I OJubb1ng Bate Ts Ilsttford ttopnbllcan and IxiabvilliCoiiratrcfal one rI23 Twlrnw1kronrlnsJourrml 15 IxulMlll I l> imUa I2 New Turk Tribnoe 0 Home And Knrm 111 Toledo Ohio hind 14 i m anHoUlnlMirnioorat Iro S Nw York TrlWi klr Tribune 175 i MrmpbU Tena CoinmerrlaA il lu JobWork a OBAN Of rUrAllY IX TEC f ODRTB CONSEESSIONAL DISTRICT Subscription 1 a year XII HARTFORD KY JUNE 8 1900 No 4tt c HUGHES TONIC Palatable Bottorthan CalomolQulnlno Tho Old lioliablo Excollont General Tonic as well aa- A Sure Curo for CHILLS and FEVER IT NEVER FAILS = Just what you nood at this season = MILD LAXATIVE NERVOUS SEDATIVE SPLEN DID TONIC = Guaranteed by DiuggUta Dont take any substitute soc and t Bottles 3- 8iDur tEiiv L- UNttornet Law HARTFORD KY nil the raarUnl ATTORNEY milKXUY ATIAWI win prartke kU Ohio niautjr eel Court of Ai IbinI el carWil ruaohknillau ivn lu him 4lliilrirnili iit Ttlrphu In oar C E SUIVHA- TTOUNKY AT LAW iiAiirroitii KY Will pm tl ISIs lon la allth ruarUnt Ohio and adjoining cuantltMinul Court Apii- IiIrtI attention gin to CII t lw Mtrii itI to kit car Urncr In ro Attj one In coarthoaa JOHN T BON- EATTORNEVAT LAW C E4TIIITW UY win him fMloa In all the mart of Ubla 1I1jullllaIartol Apjwii- IitrIaI attention MireS to F L FELIX ATTORNEY AT LAW llAIITtOttn ICY- wilt tlefifl th ar1 lalorointr alt Coyrt of Appeal Tnimpt ntt ntum alrrn to all bilnia ratrnitnl to > rar tifflre In HrraM hUlllaa A C TAYLOR ATTORN GY AT LAW IIAlrrOItD Ky Rprrll attention urea to All 1nlna retreat adtohUnnv om In wrtbi ow 4 J E DAVIDSON Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY lU tif1tain tfBtrtiniom Will practlw loll heal Kcuuatlra 1I1w1IItnUon sa to ear 8P ROll- YATTORNBYAT LAW roniiNvnii U will In all tb court ot Ohio ad fldJrtltilDtcroantlmnDiiroartol Ap aU Ipwll attmtlnn JOhN P MORTON ATTORNEY AT LAW IIAUTIOKI KY- HpMlal nttrntlon rl n to all 1esfn4 retreat attohInr ifikv la ronrthuu SHELBY TAYLQR ATTORNEY AT LAW ft HARTFORD KY Will liii uilon la all the mart ol Ohio sod ntlJolnlnK rouutbit imtl bert otApitraU prlli attention girru to nil ftalgU1flfflt tkriptc O M BARNETT ATTORNEY AT LAW HARTFORD KY Will practk U> prnlnulnn In nil Ibe sttntioD courts 01- Cblo ani Oaal will ha gircnto nil LnIna eutraitoil to bU rare OjiiectIonl ft iacIut1 JNO B WILSON ATTORNEY AT LAW HARTFORD KY Rpdtattantion given to roiketloflP making bolrlUl otftr1 1nlille for Ohio cone t j Jmre north ild public iquara HARVEY W PRUDEN ATTORNEY AT LAW IIAHTrOIII KY Will practice hi proloMlnn In tibia nnd cable 1 counties IticrvDLiCAK bottling EPNEAL at Law HARTFORD KY Will hi rufr on In nil the ronrti ol Ktatnrky 1IloIIIUnUIa given to rol let t loin icttltiu at of ilifeilentH ratatru ronfl rear And orimloal practice omr qp tatn OriOle block J 8 R WEDDING ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR at LAW HARTFORD KY Will practice him nrnfivulon In all the court of Ohio and adotnlnK 11111 fled the iiurt of A- IpeI Prompt given to all bunlnma totrmtnl him HIDoi In itrUnlKN building RR WEDDING Attorney at Law HAUTPonn KY wilt practice lmia prnffiwlnn In thronrtnt Ohio and adJolnlnR rnnotlr Notnrf 1nyic Southern Railway Through Right not Southern Kta- tjKENTUCiaMENNlJSStlE South- CAIOLdNA ALABAMA VIR GINIA North CAROLINAGEOR GIA and MISSISSIPPI I 6163 hurL Tbiw Dally Train llotvwn Lout < Till ant lexington Duirriratloi Chair Can Trala hv end arrive LanliTllI Iron 8Tentl Street Union IHiiotconnwtlnK with train of th llllnoU Control llnllroad and L II It lit I It It For Inlormatlon addrw A Wiicuoir P T A 311 4th Ave IxtaltTUI- WU IITATLOCAfiUtaitO IA IxinUjlll hiWAruantaIIAgrat IDc I THE HARTFORD 3 REPUBLICAN IFine SpecialtyaFZC1L adtOIAII1MilaltUa REV 13M PALMERS SPLEN- DID ¬ ORATION The following an Mtract from the Oration ol th lit T II M rainier ol Nw Orlran dctlrrml before the TotMrrat Vttrrau at IxjnUtlllc ii- I literary and worth rwiillnit cud duds PATRIOTISM ON I3Otu SIDES It is not my design however to dIscuss these issues On the contra ry I have traced the remote origin o the Confederate war for a purpose which is entirely conciliatory and to explain some things which may ap pear contradictory It enables patties in this struggle to give ml credit to each other for patriotic mo ¬ tives though under a mistaken view of what that patriotism may have re- quired ¬ It shows why no attempt was ventured to bring attainder of treason against the Southern chiefs whichcould not afford to be ventilat ¬ ed before any civil court under tbe terms oi the American Constitution It explains how through a noble for ¬ bearance on both sides always ex ceptlng the infamies of the reconstruc ¬ tion period the wound has been heal ¬ ed in the complete reconciliation of a divided people It explains how we of the South convinced of the right iulness of our cnuse can accept deleat without the blush of shame mantling the cheek of a single Confederate ol us all And while accepting the is sues of the war as as a decree of dealt By openly appeal to the verdict of posterity for the final vindication d- our career In making this appeal Veterans in your name nmtifpnght to tbe subject ofthlsdaya n which Is to set before you the tribunal of History before which all the Issues of the past continue to be tried and which in the view of many sound thinkers is rendering a proximate judgment in what is occurring before us in tbe Immediate presentc The most elaborate oration of the great reticles as recorded by the hiI brian Thncydldes was that proc nounced over the soldiers who hadI fallen in the Peloponnesian war The nice sense of Athenian honor did nott allow the slain to be disgraced uporit the field of battle To this sentiment of national pride was added the deep er instinct of religion which among tbe Greeks enforced the strict per romance of fqncral rites without which the restless shades were doom ed to wander upon the banks of thep gloomy Styx forbidden to pass to smidLqecarnage slain must be rescued from the foeg and be borne in solemn pomp for in ¬ terment In their native soil while then memorial shaft bluzoned their heroics deeds in double testimony of a na lions gratitude It was fitting too that tbepageant of a public funeral should be Illustrated by the highest eloquence and the first orators of Greece such as Demosthenes ande Lyslas did not disdain the oppottunl ty for the display of their loftiest geniusIt was after the disastrous eamc paign of the summer 43r B Cwhen all Attica had been ravaged by the Spartan legions and her whole popu ¬ lation was compressed within the walls of Athens that Pericles hoseI name Is imperishably linked with Athenian empire ascended the Bema to speak the honors of the Athenian dead It was however no empty punrgyricj the filigree end frost work of more rhetoric but statesmanlike and grand in the utterance ot practi ¬ cal convictions As described Gtote it was comprehensive ration- al ¬ and full not only of sense and sub- stance ¬ but of earnest patriotism im- personal and businesslike since iiI is Athens hersell who undertakes command and decorate her departed sons as well as to barken and admon- Ish ¬ the living tIlE COKKUCT OP OPINIONS I havedetained you ladles and get DO YQU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable Almost everybody who reads the news naners Is sure to of tha wonderful made Dr Kilmers SwampRoot the great kidney r bladder remedy Mtlstha great medI- cal triumph ¬ teenth century dis- covered years brDr kidney blad- der soeciaiist Is wonderfully successful In promptly curln lams back kidney bladder blesand Bright Disease which Is the worst form of kidney trouble Dr s SwampRoot Is notire ommended for ifyeu have ki Tdfey ust remedy t In so many ways In hospital work In private practice among helpless too to pur- chase ¬ proved so successful In every a special arrangement been made all readers paper who have not already tried It may have a sample bottle malt alo a look i telling about SwampRoot how to out If have kidney or trouble When writing mention reading generous offer in P aper I send your address toI Dr Kilmer Co hamtOn N Y cures by live and of the nine after of nent and uric jroi but the you the has case that his by of sent free by more and find you this this and The and I I regular fifty cent and RMMOI dollar sizes are sold by all pod druggists tlemen with this lengthened pream ¬ ble for the porpose ol justifying an in fefence which will be found to under lie all that I shall pronounce in your bearing to wit that war is not the mere outburst of human passion but that when projected on a large scale and protracted through a long period and especially when occurring between members of the urns race it conflictf bltration In vain appeal finally to tb sword from tbe ulrnple necessity of settling the question of supremacy hlstorybeI a t the Thirty Years War between Athens and Sparta was but the culmination of the struggle between the Doric and Ionic elements ol the Grecian stock I which emerged at the earliest dawn o authentic history Prom the outset these two became the exponents of two opposing systems of government and social discipline Lacedemon es poused a policy which has been de fined as continental and oligarchic while Athens represented the ideas ol commerce and Democracy Sparta sought to consolidate the continental states of Greece under tbe supremacy ol the few Athens to weld the mar- Itime states into a Pemocratlc confed- eracy of which she should be the cen ter and soul The antagonism was fundamental and the two States sting gled together like Jacob and Esau even In the womb alSo ancient was the feud that the armed InVasion of Persia only com- posed ¬ it for a time to break forth at last in the Pelloponeslan war so fatal In its issue to the independence of both All this Is however not a whit more clear to our critical philo- sophy ¬ than it was to the statesman ¬ like discernment of Pericles himself We who stand on the top of so many centuries nnd survey the whole land cape of the past understand perfectly hat the wilderness of individual free 1 so fatal to the permanence of her power was yet the only condition through which Athens worked out her t mission and became the schoolmis ¬ ress of the world The largest liber ¬ I ty speculative thought and the ut mot freedom of social life under the stimulus of a popular constitution that woke every individual into action were perhaps theonly conditions un ¬ I der which those exquisite models of l- oetry eloquence and art could in the first instance be created which sue ° a r ly to reproduce And beyond the lory of her structure and her song which tbrw such a halo around the ame of Athens Is the glory of prtx the first demonstration upon the page of history of equal citizen- ship ¬ in a free State All this how ¬ ever is traced as with a needles preI clslon by the sagacious statesman who in this splendid specimen of for ¬ naic eloquence has adroitly linked the sepulchre of the heroic warrior with the position and defense of the principles for which he bled The orator was tight With the instinct of genius he struck the keynote ofC that solemn dirge which weeping Greece was chanting over the tomb 01I her slain It is not the sentiment of natural aOectlon alone seeking to hallow the remains of brothers hus- bands and sons sons It is not the impulse of haughty honor only res cuing the brave from the iron hoof 01I an insolent foe It was the deepI thought possibly unpronounced con- viction that the dead were martyrs to a cause for which their own blood might as easily have flowed This made Greece weep as she drew her mantle over the slain and gave their names to lasting marble and Pctlcles was eloquent simply because he Inter- preted the silent thought In a thous > and souls that death fora just princi ¬ pie was a sacrifice tothe gods REMOVED A MAN LEFT A PACT with no grand commonality with clearly defined rights there was noth ¬ lag to which theconqueredracescoulc I be assiniiated and no bulwark could be raised against the corruption flow- Ing upon the bosom of such enormous wealth The Roman aristocrat was intoxicated Insallable irresistable the middle class was gone there was nothing but profigute nobles and dia bollcal populace Such in the lan- guage ¬ Draper who tersely addsAnd now it was plain thatthe contest for supreme power lay between a few leading men It found an issue Jn the first triumvirate Aft lira then pars edtbrough their inevitable course The death of Crussus and He battle Igof Pharealia left Caesar the master c the world The daggar of Brutus merely removed a man but it left the dfact The battle of Actlum reaffirmed the destiny of Rome and the death i the republic was Illustrated by the an nexation of Egypt Thus after tb lapse of 2000 years do wesummo- f ancient Rome before the tribunal history to be weighed in the scale i > equal Justtce Thus dox we trace the secret cause of that strange metempy choslsby which she slipped from republic into an empire back to a fa- tal ¬ schism In her original constitmCs tiomi prcventing her people tIng welded into a homogenous atat e I 111 And thus do we see thelongreproach lifted from her Gracchi who pass from beneath the censure of an ofTe- nsive agrainlsm Into earnest patriotS- s who vainly sought to heel the wound- of the gored States and to stay the ruin by which it was finally over whelmed Turn your attention next to Spain- Early in the Sixteenth century the annexation of Portugal and a po- Iltical combination with Austria ana- e England as well as by her ImmenseI possessions intheNewWorldovershad owing all of Europe with her great- ness beneath which the other power- stood shivering with fear Yet In the bosom of her fierce despotism lay the seeds of her early dissolution In th language of the writer whom I have already cited it was her evil COltuae- t to ruin two civilizations Oriental and Occidental and to be thereby tuined- herself Her Intolerant bigotry lost her the Netherlands just rising into opulence1 and power through which- she might have controlled the com mercial interest of the continent Her- r expulsion of the Moors who had be come the children ol her soil enrich- Ing her with the learning ladusby- and art of the Etst robbed her of tbe opportunity which England seized of becoming through her manufactures- the mart of Europe The dally Jm portatlon ofher people from those pursuits by which alone national wealth can be created sank herluto- the condition of a mere broker in the precious metals Now for generations she has stocd as Draper says a hide- ous skeleton among living nations a terrible example of that avenging Nemesis following upon the track of guilty nations and Fcourging them for their crimes Shall I point youto the Commun Ists of modern France The fatal songs of the Syreaa luring the un ¬ wary mariner upon therockofScylla breathing no more seducing accents than those of Liberty Equality Fra ternity which roused the passions of the wild enthusiasts dancing around he Tricolor of the French revolution But tbe true import of those insane nsane ravlrfgs was soon read amid the horrors ot the Basilic and the Gnillotlte until the world stood aghast at the frightful spectable of rime and blood And burning Per s spared by conquering Prussian on ¬ y to smolder beneath the torch oCher owri incendiaries tells the bitter frui- tfthatrajalisrneweeDIu like A and which unless checked by the power of Godi will yet sack the world and lay the eatth in ashes at His Ieet Tang IND PAtSK IN HISTORY The last consideration to be urged will be presented in a fewer words It- s that whatever doubt may hing around the truth of particular and Is olaled acts there Is in every portion ol history an amount of generalized truth in reference to which skepticism would be simple affectation A re- markable effort has been made in our day to reduce history to the category a positive science by the statement of the necessary laws under which hu- man ¬ actions are produced In an elaborate work treasuring the labors of a studious life but arrested before completion by the hand of death tIIrI buckle pushes the reign of Inexorable law into the sphere of the variable and contingent Not content with the proposition that the volitions of the human will tare determined by a law of their own inscrutable to the- reasoa but perfectly consistent with freedom and responsibility he boldly pronounces that the connection o cause and effect Bieas traceable here as in every other department of na ¬ ture where from given conditions the consequences may be anticipated- by the progress of logic He pro ceeds therefore to anallre the ele- ments of human character and to enumerate tbe possible conditions of human conduct deducting the con- clusions that ETstory in all its forms Is a natural development like tbe growth of a tree This at least is the representation of his theory given- by this review r Mr Prounde who besides being philosopher is also historian and who on the other hand otjects that the factS oi history never repeat themselves exaclly and that we have not that recurrence an periodicity upon which the inductions of natural science rest He concludes therefore that It would be just easy to calculate mens actions by laws like those of positive philosophy as it would be to measure Neptune- It with a foot rule or to weigh SIrius a grocers scale All this immensely typical Be tweeD these extremes all along the- f dotted line there is every shade credulity Ju the facts and deductions- Ie of hi tory and every phase of skeptl- n chin as to both With those encoun- ter disaster and defeat there is a pre- f vailing tendency to spurn Ihelestl mony ol human records They are a condition to seehow history is nlBn- a ufactnred for a pnrpoee how an im pndent partisanship manipulates facts how the truth which one per I sonally knows is suppressed bo I gross fictions are stereotyped byend d less repetition bow the brand of In Jurlous epithets is freely used to stamp ¬ falsehood with the seal of truth how misrepresentations and calumny are s stuffed into books and circulated around the world to preoccupy tI e ¬ minds of men It Is strange that some should morbidly infer all histiry to be romance at best if it be not also a br libel and a slander To which I reply ¬ that with all the uncertainty hanging about this or that particular facttheie l ls a residuum of truth which can not be destroyed and which d JUdg118mellt For instance ihrow into fable all the achievements of Semiramis and Egype ¬ tian history will survive which in ftlia aggregate we are unable to meas ure and whose precise value we can determine History delves amid the sums of Nineveh and Persepollis walks around the hanging gardens o f Babylon surveys the temples and tombs of any pyramids of Egypt cal ¬ culates the physical force that lay in ¬ all these ancient despotism and then pronounces her decree It is that this long succession of gigantic empires simply held the world until the light of freedom could break from the West until out of the bosom of a better civ ¬ ilization philosophy and science could rescue it from a superstitious and fantastic imagination It points the wholesome moral that ol all things on earth nothing is weaker than that what men call force and in its calm judicial tone utters a whis ¬ pering sarcasm upon the ambition of the sword REVIEW OF TUB PAST Regard the siege of Troy as a myth renounce all belief In the existence of Hector and Achilles discount the more veritable records of Xerxes binding with foolish chains the angry I Ilellespontor of Leonidas holding at bay the hosts of Persia in the pass of Thermopylae or the sublime of Tbemlstocles gathering her populationI within the wooden walls of his fleet- s standing on the prow of his own ship exclaiming This is now Athens Yet when you have winnowed Grecian history of a thousand legends andI even of many of her accredited facts these it stands befpre you with its lus tended coast line and you pronounce today just how much Greece has been to the world In the vast Panth eon of history she hisiIcJjSjhAtft l itojt1p oo Let Nliebultr wltn m In criticism prune away the legends ol ancient Rome let the stories of Romu lus and tbe she wolf of Numa and theI nyjnph Egerla dissolve like the moun ¬ I ala mist yet Roman history will re main In rugged grandeur throwing its bleak form against the background of the sky working out the great prob lems of law and laying the broad foundation on which rest the systems ol juiispindence and the constitutions of civil government still obtaining passi through all the galleries of modern history and unlcck the chambers In which the dusty archives of European- dlplomacyare kept assigning to each country its proper place and the con trlbution made by each to the common civilization What I affirm then ialhlK That the value of these final generalizations Is scarcely Impaired by the doubts as to this or that minute tact Content poraneous history written in the in terest of passlonor prejudice maybe largely a libel and future cilticism may be sorely puzzled to distinguish f between the truth and its travesty yet In the aggregate result these by a strange smelting process are sliced lout as not material to the issue As we may poison a fountain but cannot poison the ocean so we may coriupt single facts but cannot transmute the whole history of a people fntoa lie A thousand hints ol the tinth will tie ¬ Imbedded in the record which anti ¬ quarian research will disentomb The longisllent voices will deliver their testimony in the court of final adju dicatfon and in tlese solemn historic t retractions tbe good and the brave will a find an honest vindication Fellow >cltlzens the application of this discourse is left to silence and toI yooThat which bath been is now dand that which is to be bath already been Invective and reproach will continue In the sacred name of hiss as tory to be poured upon those who de serve only her applause The faith ful witnesses of the tt nth will go on In cold and sorrow to the tomb bury in ing their principles onjy jn a protest But they will do it in the certain fall h ofa resurrection Eternity is long and it is their lifetime Upon the lip ol of that boundless sea their prophetic gaze is fixed upon the burnished throne which human justice makes its last tribunal and before which the nations and the centuries are art ralgnedolor trial Defamation and in slander iefSas lightly on their calm spirits aa the salt spray that crystal Hzes upon the silent rock the If too the warnings of the past like the prophecies ol Cassandra aLie stillw let eyI are but sowing the dragons teeth of an armed and fierce retribution Con stltutlonaUreedom has not come forth from conflict of ages to be stifled now when her broad shield is thrown over two continents She will reappear again and again amid the birththroes of regenerated States for regulated liberty Is to the Commonwealth what piety is to the churchthe very law of life Both have struggled through corruption and decay to a more com- plete realization But if the day should come when despotism shall so far consolidate its rower as to crush all human freedom beneath its iron heel then will be consumated the sec- ond apostacy of man after the flood in the usuapatlon of Nimrod II The members of Louisiana Dlvls Ions U CYalihe conclusion ol Dr Palmers address presented him with a bunch of red and white roses Gen Gordon then announced that the Committees on Credentials and Resolutions would be appointed this morning and that jt was neccessary for each delegation to send liLa name for each committee These names are to be handed to Adjt Gen Moorman Gen Gordon also announced that each State will be expected to appoint a SergeantatArms all of whom will report to Col Cantrall at 9 oclock this morning Gen A J West of Atlanta on be hlafvol the Georgia delegation pre tented Gen Gordon with a handsome ly carved walking stick emblematic of the great struggle between the North and South Gen Gordon accepted the cane in a neat little speech of thanks and then adnounced that the portraits of dis- tinguished Confederates would be un > veiled ot 8 oclock Gen Cabell made the announce- ment ¬ from the stage that all members of the TransMississippi Department morningThesneeting morning at 10 oclock when the reg ¬ ular business of the reunion will be transacted Con Jno B Cordons High Trlbuto to Kentucky Speaking to the Confederate Vet- erans ¬ at Louisville last week Gen Gordon paid Kentucky the following high tribute The trUth is gentlemen that your state holds a place among her sisters that is not only unique but decided uMtrarcuywuVUOU inatneb tuckys history taken as a whole titles her to a position in the enI TVjtf sates Look at her struggles wuu stealthy and blood- thirsty ¬ savages in tbe wilds ol sri Un- broken ¬ wilderness when her botlplI oneers were all heroei and their wives and daughters were all heorlnes d When even her faith lul black slaves caught the contagion of courage andt of sacrifice Would that the short time allotted me permitted a reference to the long list of heroines of Kentuckys early historyand to her Daniel Boones and to her Clarks and a host of other stalwart men and brave women whoI thus blazed out the highway of progi ress and of freedom KENOCKYS DAUGHTERS Beginning her life amidst such sur ¬ rounding reared to statehood upon food so conductive to exalted man ¬ hood and noble womanhood is it any wonder that Kentuckys daughters of today are the pride of a great com ¬ monwealth and challenge universal recognition as among the fairest the truest and tenderest of our peerless women Is it any wonder that the Kentucky of today boasts of the proud array of her great sons of her Breck bridges of her Clays and of her Crittendens her Helms and her Han ¬ sons her Marshal and her Morgans and her almost endless catalogue of soldiers and statesmen worthy of the highest niches in our republican Pan jheon Is it any wonder that from such a field sown with such seed we should today gather this harvest of generosity and lavish tribute to the heroic remnants of the immortal Con federate armies hit any wonder that such planting and such culture should have produced a hospitality as free as the air and as boundleu as the ocean I In conclusion permit me to briefly recall another chapter In Kentuckys I life a chapter which embraces the most momentous period of her histo- ry or of the history or this republic During the stupendous conflict be tween the American states Ken tuckys most famous families and all classes of her people were represented in both the Union and Confederate armies In her marvelous fecundity she had previously given birth to both Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln These two great sons torn within a few months and milts of each other nurtured on the bosom of this coul mon mother were destined in Gods mysteriOus providence to find homes in different sections to grow up under different Institutions to become the representatives of conflicting clvJlIza lions respective presidents of contending republics The one was to die at last dlslranchlsed by the which he had long and faithfullyservedlnd tor whose flag he bad shed on Mexican a IF YOU WANT FirstClass Uptodate Job Printing Call at this Office ReasonableII FRIDAY Attorney soil The other was to meet his death by an assassins bullet NO NEUTRALITY In like manner Kentuckys counsel I n were divided some for the Union some for the Confederacy These counsellors ably strove to keep her aloof from the impending conflict to render her passive and neutral but neutralityIn never had been and never will be Kentuckys role It could not be tbe neutralityIs nor of Gods economy Neutrality has no place in masterful minds nor in heroic hearts Neutrality has never yet developed a great character nor characterized great people nor writ ¬ ten one sparkling page In human history Kentucky therefore would have none of it Governors might proclaim neutrality legislatures might enact it but no edicts nor stat utes could chain down the unconquer ¬ able spirit of Kenluckys sons Into the one army or the other they went as their convictions guided them And wherever they faught whether for the union of all the states or the independence of the southern states whether they followed the flag of this great republic br tUe fiery cross of splraI ¬ ¬ freedom under whatever banner or leaders they were marshaled Ken tuckys sons wrote their noble record on historys most luminous pages Heaven bless protect and guide Kentucky May harmony and Chris lIf 11 IYII7J Mr R O Everljr Mrs E C ErertjCOa Diamond Street Philadelphia Pa isyij I feel woll never felt better 4htn > for your at ¬ tention and Pernna I will be glad to- o alt I cau In the waY of advancing the tale of your valuable medicine I do- hink Peruns the beat medicine I have ried at any time Blanc I began taking Pernna we have never been without It Read what an elderly woman sayss woman who has pueed through all the phases crises and experiences of gIrl- hood ¬ womanhood and motherhood I really believe that every woman in the world ought to have Pefuna on band the time I for If she gets tired Peru na refrebee her If ahe get nervoo it her If despondent It cheers Dr liereid- iOOu B P terrible stages producing coppercolored Wets on face or hotly little ulcers on time tongue In mount br throat falling of hair or eyebrows decay flesh or tones completely and forever eradicated without the uto of Injurious drum leaving stem a pure strong and health or enlarged Teto > wblch V lead to a complete lots of sexual power alto Jlydrocele Gonorrhoea Stricture and all JrlTito and Venereal Diseases and Weaknesses of men quickly cured Druggist I Ills tile t V IUIfIlRllwfth wiiiiJrite Franklin County Georgia Last spring I got past doing and my adcalled chant recommended Dr Pierces Paver ¬ bottLI pamphlet wrapped around the bottle conipUcated PITotIte ¬ everymorning MedicalDiscovery bgato astonished at my improvement I am alsodo tian fellowship rule all her counsels and peace joy and plenty abide for- ever in all her homes GIRLHOOD WOMANHOOD AND MOTHERHOOD Are thePelvic and Invigorates It if a panacea for all perlUli mother a neverfalling atAndbyto Ht nursing mother both for herself andics theehsn1of of equal efficacy to the woman 11 thin critical perIod Surely PoruQIo t th womans friend That catarrh baa any relation to bar manyIt ThU Insidious dUeaaa penetrate to 6 L I s wonderfu of barrenness I thirty years old and had never borne an- yohtldren but since beginning your medicine Igave bIrth toe tsnuound baby ftf girl She la now six month old and weighs t wahtyfl va pound My frJnd were all surprised Some woWed mo believe It until they camo to husband says be never paw such a change In anyone as there wu In m- atter I bad taken three or four bottles of Perana I am stronger tan I have ben since I Wu quite young God bless you and your medicine forever Address Dr Ilartman Columbus 0 for free catarrh took HELP FOR YOU For treatment and a speedy cure write or go to J Newton Hathaway whose reputation is a sufficient of satisfactoryresults Consultation oftynSaiFree olsonbrySypllUllllnalllt the out the of the the In fuUtatoarlrnrala Gleet in me am see me My Kidney and cult Too Frequent Bloody of all functional diseases of the Heart Lungs Uverand Stomach also Catarrh Kupture Ilheumatlsm riles Fistula and all Blood and Skin Disease and all Female Diseases treated according to the latest and bed methods known to medical science Home Treatment dencesiwayssoc- cesaful Ilycorrespos Write for free book Just published sal Symptom blank if you cannot caU J NEWTON HATHAWAY M D DrHatbawarAC SOfChnirh NuhTllle Tnat- VTIolf rrrn wnz Nervous ak Men Thousands of Tonnv and middleaired men are annuallr to a premature rrxro through IAICCY INUlSCHliTION BXCISHBBB AND ISLOOD- UI8DAILB If Oil ha IIny oCtba follolall Iplom COD I It as bfotsitia 1UVJAIC Are mierToel and weak despondent and gloomy before the eyes with dark circles under them weak Irritable palpitation of the heart dreamlandioureIedlmflent In urine pimples on sunken hollow cheeks careworn expression llfeeu dlstraitful tack eye nights chanffeablt mood weak man and strength tired mornings 4 hood stunted otJraaajlrtuu decay bone palti hilt loose SQtO UIfOIto etc Our New Method Ttmc t Will cure yoU MENS LIFE BLOOD Nothiug ens be more demoralizing to yOIIlIII4 middleaged men than enmissioss dt1laltbrorb the urine They euflia man for bmiiIeeU mar It I1llfbt oraecnt habits la yotb cell b social No maUer whether ned life or happiness Treatment wlU natural weakness or excesses our New Method tinly era TOa GURUS OUA ANTUD NO CURB 140 PAY No Name Used Without Written Consent I IIDeforeTreatmea tountofgoodlU W A Malr of Itqu 0 ystI was one of the connlltu victims early vice at 15 of are Tile draIns on ay system were weakeatne 017 braims a e sexual and nerious ly leD1 For ten trIed score of doctors- eiectrlcbeltaudp4telitlflediCin Sombel nienonecured 1 ap hi dpalr in- tact contemplating lclil when a friend ad- vised me as a last retort to glee the New Method Trcatmaas of Or K4 K a fair trial Without confidence I contented and la three months I WI a cured moan I was cured lena years ago am married and hartll K A X to afflicted fellow menAfter Tile Knows honest urinaryPalOIUIDnt We reattlltttt 13 xrTe treat sod cure Varlcocele Gmltsloai Nerrons Dttnity Hemiaai neaKoeu Cleat Stricture Unnatural Dlscharcts Belt Abuse KWne and liladdar SJ Diseases and itt diseases of Men and Women NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT PRIVATE Ne IONO lent Co D No names on boxes or CBTclopes ETtrythlnt coafldcnUal finettloa list aDd cost ot treatment Hl B- S DR Kennedy Kergan S eaa fflfagsa C K KK KK KAK KK K r tV K > 1 11

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Page 1: OJubb1ng Bate THE HARTFORD REPUBLICAN IF YOU WANTnyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7b8g8fgd0h/data/0105.pdf · 2013-06-19 · so fatal to the permanence ofher power was yet the only condition through

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0 Home And Knrm 111Toledo Ohio hind 14i m anHoUlnlMirnioorat Iro

S Nw York TrlWi klr Tribune 175i MrmpbU Tena CoinmerrlaA il lu

JobWork a OBAN Of rUrAllY IX TEC f ODRTB CONSEESSIONAL DISTRICT Subscription 1 a yearXII HARTFORD KY JUNE 8 1900 No 4tt

c

HUGHES TONICPalatable

Bottorthan CalomolQulnlnoTho Old lioliablo

Excollont General Tonicas well aa-

A Sure Curo for CHILLS andFEVER

IT NEVER FAILS=Just what you nood atthis season=MILD LAXATIVE

NERVOUS SEDATIVESPLEN DID TONIC=Guaranteed by DiuggUta

Dont take any substitute

soc and t Bottles 3-

8iDurtEiivL-UNttornet Law

HARTFORD KYnil the raarUnl

ATTORNEYmilKXUYATIAWI

win prartke kUOhio niautjr eel Court of AiIbinI elcarWil ruaohknillau ivnlu him 4lliilrirnili iit Ttlrphu In oar

C E SUIVHA-TTOUNKY AT LAW

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Ohio and adjoining cuantltMinul Court Apii-IiIrtI attention gin to CII t lw Mtrii itI tokit car Urncr In ro Attj one In coarthoaa

JOHN T BON-EATTORNEVAT LAW

C E4TIIITW UYwin him fMloa In all the mart of

Ubla 1I1jullllaIartol Apjwii-IitrIaI attention MireS to

F L FELIXATTORNEY AT LAW

llAIITtOttn ICY-

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A C TAYLORATTORN GY AT LAW

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4 J E DAVIDSONAttorney at Law

HARTFORD KYlU tif1tain tfBtrtiniom

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8 P ROll-YATTORNBYAT LAW

roniiNvnii Uwill In all tb court ot

Ohio ad fldJrtltilDtcroantlmnDiiroartol Ap aUIpwll attmtlnn

JOhN P MORTONATTORNEY AT LAW

IIAUTIOKI KY-

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SHELBY TAYLQRATTORNEY AT LAW

ft HARTFORD KYWill liii uilon la all the mart ol

Ohio sod ntlJolnlnK rouutbit imtl bert otApitraUprlli attention girru to nil ftalgU1flfflt

tkriptc

O M BARNETT

ATTORNEY AT LAWHARTFORD KY

Will practk U > prnlnulnn In nil IbesttntioDcourts 01-

Cblo ani Oaalwill ha gircnto nil LnIna eutraitoil to bU rareOjiiectIonl ft iacIut1

JNO B WILSONATTORNEY AT LAW

HARTFORD KYRpdtattantion given to roiketloflP making

bolrlUl otftr1 1nlille for Ohio conetj Jmre north ild public iquara

HARVEY W PRUDENATTORNEY AT LAW

IIAHTrOIII KYWill practice hi proloMlnn In tibia nnd cable1 counties IticrvDLiCAK bottling

EPNEALat Law

HARTFORD KYWill hi rufr on In nil the ronrti ol

Ktatnrky 1IloIIIUnUIa given to rol let t loinicttltiu at of ilifeilentH ratatru ronfl rear Andorimloal practice omr qp tatn OriOle block

J 8 R WEDDINGATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR at LAW

HARTFORD KYWill practice him nrnfivulon In all the court of

Ohio and adotnlnK 11111 fled the iiurt of A-

IpeI Prompt given to all bunlnmatotrmtnl him HIDoi In itrUnlKN building

RR WEDDINGAttorney at Law

HAUTPonn KYwilt practice lmia prnffiwlnn In thronrtnt Ohio

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SouthernRailway

Through Right not Southern Kta-

tjKENTUCiaMENNlJSStlE South-

CAIOLdNA ALABAMA VIRGINIA North CAROLINAGEORGIA and MISSISSIPPI

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For Inlormatlon addrwA Wiicuoir P T A 311 4th Ave IxtaltTUI-

WU IITATLOCAfiUtaitO IA IxinUjlll

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THE HARTFORD3

REPUBLICANIFine SpecialtyaFZC1L

adtOIAII1MilaltUa

REV 13M PALMERS SPLEN-

DID

¬

ORATION

The following an Mtract from the Oration olth litT II M rainier ol Nw Orlran dctlrrmlbefore the TotMrrat Vttrrau at IxjnUtlllc ii-I literary and worth rwiillnit cud duds

PATRIOTISM ON I3Otu SIDES

It is not my design however todIscuss these issues On the contrary I have traced the remote origin othe Confederate war for a purposewhich is entirely conciliatory and toexplain some things which may appear contradictory It enablespatties in this struggle to give mlcredit to each other for patriotic mo ¬

tives though under a mistaken viewof what that patriotism may have re-

quired¬

It shows why no attemptwas ventured to bring attainder oftreason against the Southern chiefswhichcould not afford to be ventilat ¬

ed before any civil court under tbeterms oi the American ConstitutionIt explains how through a noble for ¬bearance on both sides always exceptlng the infamies of the reconstruc ¬

tion period the wound has been heal ¬

ed in the complete reconciliation of adivided people It explains how weof the South convinced of the rightiulness of our cnuse can accept deleatwithout the blush of shame mantlingthe cheek of a single Confederate olus all And while accepting the issues of the war as as a decree of dealtBy openly appeal to the verdict ofposterity for the final vindication d-

our career In making this appealVeterans in your name nmtifpnghtto tbe subject ofthlsdaya nwhich Is to set before you the tribunalof History before which all the Issuesof the past continue to be tried andwhich in the view of many soundthinkers is rendering a proximatejudgment in what is occurring beforeus in tbe Immediate presentc

The most elaborate oration of thegreat reticles as recorded by the hiIbrian Thncydldes was that procnounced over the soldiers who hadIfallen in the Peloponnesian war Thenice sense of Athenian honor did nottallow the slain to be disgraced uporitthe field of battle To this sentimentof national pride was added the deeper instinct of religion which amongtbe Greeks enforced the strict perromance of fqncral rites withoutwhich the restless shades were doomed to wander upon the banks of thepgloomy Styx forbidden to pass to

smidLqecarnageslain must be rescued from the foegand be borne in solemn pomp for in ¬

terment In their native soil while thenmemorial shaft bluzoned their heroicsdeeds in double testimony of a nalions gratitude It was fitting toothat tbepageant of a public funeralshould be Illustrated by the highesteloquence and the first orators of

Greece such as Demosthenes andeLyslas did not disdain the oppottunlty for the display of their loftiest

geniusItwas after the disastrous eamc

paign of the summer 43r B Cwhenall Attica had been ravaged by theSpartan legions and her whole popu ¬

lation was compressed within thewalls of Athens that Pericles hoseIname Is imperishably linked withAthenian empire ascended the Bema

to speak the honors of the Atheniandead It was however no emptypunrgyricj the filigree end frost work

of more rhetoric but statesmanlikeand grand in the utterance ot practi ¬

cal convictions As described

Gtote it was comprehensive ration-

al

¬

and full not only of sense and sub-

stance

¬

but of earnest patriotism im-

personal and businesslike sinceiiI

is Athens hersell who undertakescommand and decorate her departedsons as well as to barken and admon-

Ish

¬

the living

tIlE COKKUCT OP OPINIONS

I havedetained you ladles and get

DO YQU GET UP

WITH A LAME BACK

Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable

Almost everybody who reads the newsnaners Is sure to of tha wonderful

made DrKilmers SwampRootthe great kidney r

bladder remedyMtlstha great medI-

cal triumph ¬

teenth century dis-covered yearsbrDrkidney blad-der soeciaiist Is

wonderfully successful In promptly curlnlams back kidney bladderblesand Bright Disease which Is the worstform of kidney trouble

Dr s SwampRoot Is notireommended for ifyeu have kiTdfeyust remedy t

In so many ways In hospital work In privatepractice among helpless too to pur-

chase¬

proved so successful Inevery a special arrangementbeen made all readers paperwho have not already tried It may have asample bottle malt alo a look

i telling about SwampRoot how toout If have kidney or trouble

When writing mention reading generous

offer in PaperI send your address

toIDr Kilmer CohamtOn N Y

cures by

liveand

of the nine

after of

nentand

uric jroi

but

the you

thehas

case that hisby of

sent free bymore and

find youthis

this and

The

and

II regular fifty cent and RMMOI

dollar sizes are sold by all pod druggists

tlemen with this lengthened pream ¬

ble for the porpose ol justifying an infefence which will be found to underlie all that I shall pronounce in yourbearing to wit that war is notthe mere outburst of human passionbut that when projected on a largescale and protracted through a longperiod and especially when occurringbetween members of the urns race it

conflictfbltration In vain appeal finally to tbsword from tbe ulrnple necessity ofsettling the question of supremacyhlstorybeI a

tthe Thirty Years War between Athensand Sparta was but the culminationof the struggle between the Doric andIonic elements ol the Grecian stock I

which emerged at the earliest dawn oauthentic history Prom the outsetthese two became the exponents oftwo opposing systems of governmentand social discipline Lacedemon espoused a policy which has been defined as continental and oligarchicwhile Athens represented the ideas olcommerce and Democracy Spartasought to consolidate the continentalstates of Greece under tbe supremacyol the few Athens to weld the mar-Itime states into a Pemocratlc confed-eracy of which she should be the center and soul The antagonism wasfundamental and the two States stinggled together like Jacob and Esaueven In the womb

alSo ancient was the feud that thearmed InVasion of Persia only com-posed

¬

it for a time to break forth atlast in the Pelloponeslan war so fatalIn its issue to the independence ofboth All this Is however not awhit more clear to our critical philo-sophy

¬

than it was to the statesman ¬

like discernment of Pericles himselfWe who stand on the top of so manycenturies nnd survey the whole landcape of the past understand perfectlyhat the wilderness of individual free 1

so fatal to the permanence of herpower was yet the only conditionthrough which Athens worked out her tmission and became the schoolmis ¬

ress of the world The largest liber ¬ I

ty speculative thought and the utmot freedom of social life under thestimulus of a popular constitution thatwoke every individual into actionwere perhaps theonly conditions un ¬ I

der which those exquisite models of l-

oetry eloquence and art could in thefirst instance be created which sue °

a rly to reproduce And beyond the

lory of her structure and her songwhich tbrw such a halo around the

ame of Athens Is the glory of prtxthe first demonstration upon

the page of history of equal citizen-

ship¬

in a free State All this how ¬

ever is traced as with a needles preIclslon by the sagacious statesmanwho in this splendid specimen of for ¬

naic eloquence has adroitly linkedthe sepulchre of the heroic warriorwith the position and defense of theprinciples for which he bled Theorator was tight With the instinctof genius he struck the keynote ofCthat solemn dirge which weepingGreece was chanting over the tomb 01Iher slain It is not the sentiment ofnatural aOectlon alone seeking tohallow the remains of brothers hus-

bands and sons sons It is not theimpulse of haughty honor only rescuing the brave from the iron hoof 01Ian insolent foe It was the deepIthought possibly unpronounced con-

viction that the dead were martyrs toa cause for which their own bloodmight as easily have flowed Thismade Greece weep as she drew hermantle over the slain and gave theirnames to lasting marble and Pctlcleswas eloquent simply because he Inter-

preted the silent thought In a thous >

and souls that death fora just princi ¬

pie was a sacrifice tothe godsREMOVED A MAN LEFT A PACT

with no grand commonality withclearly defined rights there was noth ¬

lag to which theconqueredracescoulc I

be assiniiated and no bulwark could

be raised against the corruption flow-

Ing upon the bosom of such enormouswealth The Roman aristocrat was

intoxicated Insallable irresistablethe middle class was gone there was

nothing but profigute nobles and diabollcal populace Such in the lan-

guage¬

Draper who tersely addsAndnow it was plain thatthe contest for

supreme power lay between a few

leading men It found an issue Jnthe first triumvirate Aft lira then parsedtbrough their inevitable course

The death of Crussus and He battleIgof Pharealia left Caesar the master c

the world The daggar of Brutusmerely removed a man but it left the

dfact The battle of Actlum reaffirmed

the destiny of Rome and the death i

the republic was Illustrated by the an

nexation of Egypt Thus after tb

lapse of 2000 years do wesummo-fancient Rome before the tribunal

history to be weighed in the scale i >

equal Justtce Thus dox we trace thesecret cause of that strange metempychoslsby which she slipped from

republic into an empire back to a fa-

tal¬

schism In her originalconstitmCs

tiomi prcventing her peopletIng welded into a homogenous atat e

I

111

And thus do we see thelongreproachlifted from her Gracchi who passfrom beneath the censure of an ofTe-

nsive agrainlsm Into earnest patriotS-s who vainly sought to heel the wound-

of the gored States and to stay theruin by which it was finally overwhelmed

Turn your attention next to Spain-Early in the Sixteenth centurythe annexation of Portugal and a po-

Iltical combination with Austria ana-

e England as well as by her ImmenseIpossessions intheNewWorldovershadowing all of Europe with her great-ness beneath which the other power-stood shivering with fear Yet In thebosom of her fierce despotism lay theseeds of her early dissolution In thlanguage of the writer whom I havealready cited it was her evil COltuae-

t to ruin two civilizations Oriental andOccidental and to be thereby tuined-herself Her Intolerant bigotry losther the Netherlands just rising intoopulence1 and power through which-

she might have controlled the commercial interest of the continent Her-

r expulsion of the Moors who had become the children ol her soil enrich-Ing her with the learning ladusby-and art of the Etst robbed her of tbeopportunity which England seized ofbecoming through her manufactures-the mart of Europe The dally Jmportatlon ofher people from thosepursuits by which alone nationalwealth can be created sank herluto-the condition of a mere broker in theprecious metals Now forgenerationsshe has stocd as Draper says a hide-

ous skeleton among living nations aterrible example of that avengingNemesis following upon the track ofguilty nations and Fcourging themfor their crimes

Shall I point youto the CommunIsts of modern France The fatalsongs of the Syreaa luring the un ¬

wary mariner upon therockofScyllabreathing no more seducing accentsthan those of Liberty Equality Fraternity which roused the passions ofthe wild enthusiasts dancing aroundhe Tricolor of the French revolution

But tbe true import of those insanensane ravlrfgs was soon read amid

the horrors ot the Basilic and theGnillotlte until the world stoodaghast at the frightful spectable ofrime and blood And burning Pers spared by conquering Prussian on ¬

y to smolder beneath the torch oCherowri incendiaries tells the bitter frui-tfthatrajalisrneweeDIu like A

and which unless checked by thepower of Godi will yet sack the world

and lay the eatth in ashes at His

IeetTang IND PAtSK IN HISTORY

The last consideration to be urgedwill be presented in a fewer words It-

s that whatever doubt may hingaround the truth of particular and Is

olaled acts there Is in every portionol history an amount of generalizedtruth in reference to which skepticismwould be simple affectation A re-

markable effort has been made in ourday to reduce history to the category

a positive science by the statementof the necessary laws under which hu-

man

¬

actions are produced In anelaborate work treasuring the laborsof a studious life but arrested before

completion by the hand of death tIIrIbuckle pushes the reign of Inexorablelaw into the sphere of the variableand contingent Not content withthe proposition that the volitions of

the human will tare determined by alaw of their own inscrutable to the-

reasoa but perfectly consistent withfreedom and responsibility he boldlypronounces that the connection ocause and effect Bieas traceable hereas in every other department of na ¬

ture where from given conditionsthe consequences may be anticipated-

by the progress of logic He proceeds therefore to anallre the ele-

ments of human character and toenumerate tbe possible conditions of

human conduct deducting the con-

clusions that ETstory in all its formsIs a natural development like tbegrowth of a tree This at least isthe representation of his theory given-

by this review r Mr Prounde who

besides being philosopher is alsohistorian and who on the otherhand otjects that the factS oi historynever repeat themselves exaclly andthat we have not that recurrence anperiodicity upon which the inductionsof natural science rest He concludes

therefore that It would be justeasy to calculate mens actions bylaws like those of positive philosophyas it would be to measure Neptune-

It with a foot rule or to weigh SIriusa grocers scale

All this immensely typical Be

tweeD these extremes all along the-

f dotted line there is every shadecredulity Ju the facts and deductions-

Ie of hi tory and every phase of skeptl-

n chin as to both With those encoun-

ter disaster and defeat there is a pre-

f vailing tendency to spurn Ihelestlmony ol human records They area condition to seehow history is nlBn-

a ufactnred for a pnrpoee how an impndent partisanship manipulatesfacts how the truth which one per

I sonally knows is suppressed boI gross fictions are stereotyped byend

d

less repetition bow the brand of InJurlous epithets is freely used to stamp

¬ falsehood with the seal of truth howmisrepresentations and calumny are

s stuffed into books and circulatedaround the world to preoccupy tI e

¬ minds of men It Is strange that someshould morbidly infer all histiry tobe romance at best if it be not also a

br libel and a slander To which I reply¬ that with all the uncertainty hanging

about this or that particular facttheiel ls a residuum of truth which can notbe destroyed and which d

JUdg118melltFor instance ihrow into fable all

the achievements of Semiramis andEgype ¬

tian history will survive which inftlia aggregate we are unable to measure and whose precise value we candetermine History delves amid thesums of Nineveh and Persepolliswalks around the hanging gardens o fBabylon surveys the temples andtombs of any pyramids of Egypt cal ¬

culates the physical force that lay in¬ all these ancient despotism and then

pronounces her decree It is that thislong succession of gigantic empiressimply held the world until the lightof freedom could break from the Westuntil out of the bosom of a better civ ¬

ilization philosophy and sciencecould rescue it from a superstitiousand fantastic imagination It pointsthe wholesome moral that ol allthings on earth nothing is weakerthan that what men call force and inits calm judicial tone utters a whis ¬

pering sarcasm upon the ambitionof the sword

REVIEW OF TUB PAST

Regard the siege of Troy as a mythrenounce all belief In the existence ofHector and Achilles discount themore veritable records of Xerxesbinding with foolish chains the angryIIlellespontor of Leonidas holding atbay the hosts of Persia in the pass ofThermopylae or the sublime ofTbemlstocles gathering her populationIwithin the wooden walls of his fleet-s standing on the prow of his ownship exclaiming This is now AthensYet when you have winnowed Grecianhistory of a thousand legends andIeven of many of her accredited factsthese it stands befpre you with its lustended coast line and you pronouncetoday just how much Greece hasbeen to the world In the vast Pantheon of history she hisiIcJjSjhAtft l

itojt1p ooLet Nliebultr wltn m In

criticism prune away the legends ol

ancient Rome let the stories of Romulus and tbe she wolf of Numa and theInyjnph Egerla dissolve like the moun ¬

I ala mist yet Roman history will re

main In rugged grandeur throwing itsbleak form against the background ofthe sky working out the great problems of law and laying the broad

foundation on which rest the systemsol juiispindence and the constitutionsof civil government still obtainingpassithrough all the galleries of modern

history and unlcck the chambers In

which the dusty archives of European-

dlplomacyare kept assigning to each

country its proper place and the con

trlbution made by each to the common

civilizationWhat I affirm then ialhlK That

the value of these final generalizationsIs scarcely Impaired by the doubts asto this or that minute tact Contentporaneous history written in the interest of passlonor prejudice maybelargely a libel and future cilticismmay be sorely puzzled to distinguish

f between the truth and its travestyyet In the aggregate result these by a

strange smelting process are sliced

lout as not material to the issue As

we may poison a fountain but cannotpoison the ocean so we may coriuptsingle facts but cannot transmute thewhole history of a people fntoa lieA thousand hints ol the tinth will tie

¬ Imbedded in the record which anti ¬

quarian research will disentomb Thelongisllent voices will deliver theirtestimony in the court of final adjudicatfon and in tlese solemn historic

t retractions tbe good and the brave willa find an honest vindication

Fellow >cltlzens the application of

this discourse is left to silence and toIyooThat which bath been is now

dand that which is to be bath alreadybeen Invective and reproach willcontinue In the sacred name of hiss

as tory to be poured upon those who de

serve only her applause The faithful witnesses of the tt nth will go on

In cold and sorrow to the tomb buryin ing their principles onjy jn a protest

But they will do it in the certain fall h

ofa resurrection Eternity is longand it is their lifetime Upon the lip

ol of that boundless sea their propheticgaze is fixed upon the burnishedthrone which human justice makesits last tribunal and before which thenations and the centuries are artralgnedolor trial Defamation and

in slander iefSas lightly on their calm

spirits aa the salt spray that crystalHzes upon the silent rock

the If too the warnings of the past

like the prophecies ol Cassandra aLiestillw leteyI

are but sowing the dragons teeth ofan armed and fierce retribution ConstltutlonaUreedom has not come forthfrom conflict of ages to be stifled nowwhen her broad shield is thrown overtwo continents She will reappearagain and again amid the birththroesof regenerated States for regulatedliberty Is to the Commonwealth whatpiety is to the churchthe very lawof life Both have struggled throughcorruption and decay to a more com-plete realization But if the dayshould come when despotism shall sofar consolidate its rower as to crushall human freedom beneath its ironheel then will be consumated the sec-

ond apostacy of man after the flood inthe usuapatlon of Nimrod II

The members of Louisiana DlvlsIons U CYalihe conclusion olDr Palmers address presented himwith a bunch of red and white roses

Gen Gordon then announced thatthe Committees on Credentials andResolutions would be appointed thismorning and that jt was neccessaryfor each delegation to send liLa namefor each committee These names areto be handed to Adjt Gen MoormanGen Gordon also announced that eachState will be expected to appoint aSergeantatArms all of whom willreport to Col Cantrall at 9 oclockthis morning

Gen A J West of Atlanta on behlafvol the Georgia delegation pretented Gen Gordon with a handsomely carved walking stick emblematicof the great struggle between theNorth and South

Gen Gordon accepted the cane in aneat little speech of thanks and thenadnounced that the portraits of dis-

tinguished Confederates would be un >

veiled ot 8 oclockGen Cabell made the announce-

ment¬

from the stage that all membersof the TransMississippi Department

morningThesneetingmorning at 10 oclock when the reg ¬

ular business of the reunion will betransacted

Con Jno B Cordons HighTrlbuto to Kentucky

Speaking to the Confederate Vet-

erans¬

at Louisville last week GenGordon paid Kentucky the followinghigh tribute

The trUth is gentlemen that yourstate holds a place among her sistersthat is not only unique but decideduMtrarcuywuVUOU inatneb

tuckys history taken as a whole

titles her to a position in the enITVjtf sates Look at herstruggles wuu stealthy and blood-

thirsty¬

savages in tbe wilds ol sri Un-

broken¬

wilderness when her botlplIoneers were all heroei and their wives

and daughters were all heorlnes d

When even her faith lul black slavescaught the contagion of courage andtof sacrifice

Would that the short time allottedme permitted a reference to the longlist of heroines of Kentuckys earlyhistoryand to her Daniel Boones

and to her Clarks and a host of otherstalwart men and brave women whoIthus blazed out the highway of progiress and of freedom

KENOCKYS DAUGHTERS

Beginning her life amidst such sur ¬

rounding reared to statehood upon

food so conductive to exalted man ¬

hood and noble womanhood is it anywonder that Kentuckys daughters of

today are the pride of a great com ¬

monwealth and challenge universalrecognition as among the fairest thetruest and tenderest of our peerless

women Is it any wonder that theKentucky of today boasts of the proud

array of her great sons of her Breck

bridges of her Clays and of herCrittendens her Helms and her Han ¬

sons her Marshal and her Morgans

and her almost endless catalogue of

soldiers and statesmen worthy of thehighest niches in our republican Panjheon Is it any wonder that from

such a field sown with such seed we

should today gather this harvest ofgenerosity and lavish tribute to theheroic remnants of the immortal Con

federate armies hit any wonderthat such planting and such cultureshould have produced a hospitality asfree as the air and as boundleu asthe ocean

I In conclusion permit me to briefly

recall another chapter In KentuckysI life a chapter which embraces the

most momentous period of her histo-

ry or of the history or this republicDuring the stupendous conflict be

tween the American states Ken

tuckys most famous families and allclasses of her people were representedin both the Union and Confederate

armies In her marvelous fecundityshe had previously given birth to bothJefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln

These two great sons torn within afew months and milts of each othernurtured on the bosom of this coulmon mother were destined in GodsmysteriOus providence to find homesin different sections to grow up underdifferent Institutions to become therepresentatives of conflicting clvJlIzalions respective presidentsof contending republics The onewas to die at last dlslranchlsed by the

which he had long andfaithfullyservedlnd tor whose flaghe bad shed on Mexican

a

IF YOU WANTFirstClass Uptodate JobPrinting Call at this Office

ReasonableIIFRIDAY

Attorney

soil The other was to meet hisdeath by an assassins bullet

NO NEUTRALITYIn like manner Kentuckys counsel

I n were divided some for the Unionsome for the Confederacy Thesecounsellors ably strove to keep heraloof from the impending conflict torender her passive and neutral but

neutralityInnever had been and never will beKentuckys role It could not be tbe

neutralityIsnor of Gods economy Neutrality hasno place in masterful minds nor inheroic hearts Neutrality has neveryet developed a great character norcharacterized great people nor writ¬

ten one sparkling page In humanhistory Kentucky therefore wouldhave none of it Governors mightproclaim neutrality legislaturesmight enact it but no edicts nor statutes could chain down the unconquer ¬

able spirit of Kenluckys sons Intothe one army or the other they wentas their convictions guided themAnd wherever they faught whetherfor the union of all the states or theindependence of the southern stateswhether they followed the flag of thisgreat republic br tUe fiery cross ofsplraI¬

¬

freedom under whatever banner orleaders they were marshaled Kentuckys sons wrote their noble recordon historys most luminous pages

Heaven bless protect and guideKentucky May harmony and Chris

lIf 11 IYII7JMr R O Everljr

Mrs E C ErertjCOa Diamond StreetPhiladelphia Pa isyij I feel wollnever felt better 4htn > for your at ¬

tention and Pernna I will be glad to-

o alt I cau In the waY of advancing thetale of your valuable medicine I do-

hink Peruns the beat medicine I haveried at any time Blanc I began taking

Pernna we have never been without ItRead what an elderly woman sayss

woman who has pueed through all thephases crises and experiences of gIrl-

hood¬

womanhood and motherhood Ireally believe that every woman in theworld ought to have Pefuna on band

the time I for If she gets tired Peruna refrebee her If ahe get nervoo it

her If despondent It cheers

Dr

liereid-

iOOuB Pterrible stages producing coppercoloredWets on face or hotly little ulcers on time

tongue In mount br throat falling of

hair or eyebrows decay flesh ortones completely and forever eradicatedwithout the uto of Injurious drum leaving

stem a pure strong and health

or enlarged Teto > wblchV lead to a complete lots of

sexual power alto Jlydrocele GonorrhoeaStricture and all JrlTito and Venereal

Diseases and Weaknesses of men quicklycured

Druggist I

Ills tile

tV

IUIfIlRllwfthwiiiiJriteFranklin County Georgia Lastspring I got past doing and myadcalledchant recommended Dr Pierces Paver ¬bottLIpamphlet wrapped around the bottleconipUcatedPITotIte ¬

everymorningMedicalDiscoverybgatoastonished at my improvement I amalsodo

tian fellowship rule all her counselsand peace joy and plenty abide for-

ever in all her homes

GIRLHOOD WOMANHOOD AND MOTHERHOOD

Are thePelvicand Invigorates It if a panacea for allperlUlimother a neverfalling atAndbyto Htnursing mother both for herself andics

theehsn1ofof equal efficacy to the woman 11 thincritical perIod Surely PoruQIo t thwomans friend

That catarrh baa any relation to barmanyItThU Insidious dUeaaa penetrate to6 L

I s wonderfu

of barrenness Ithirty years

old and hadnever borne an-yohtldren butsince beginningyour medicineIgave bIrth toetsnuound baby

ftf

girl She la now six month old andweighs twahtyfl va pound My frJndwere all surprised Some woWed mo

believe It until they camo tohusband says be never paw such a

change In anyone as there wu In m-

atter I bad taken three or four bottles ofPerana I am stronger tan I haveben since I Wu quite young Godbless you and your medicine forever

Address Dr Ilartman Columbus 0for free catarrh took

HELP FOR YOUFor treatment and a speedy cure writeor go to J Newton Hathaway whose

reputation is a sufficient ofsatisfactoryresults ConsultationoftynSaiFree

olsonbrySypllUllllnalllt

the outthe of the

the In

fuUtatoarlrnrala

Gleet

in

me

am

see meMy

Kidney andcult Too Frequent Bloody ofall functional diseases of the Heart LungsUverand Stomach also Catarrh KuptureIlheumatlsm riles Fistula and all Bloodand Skin Disease and all Female Diseasestreated according to the latest and bedmethods known to medical science

Home Treatment dencesiwayssoc-cesaful

Ilycorrespos

Write for free book Just published salSymptom blank if you cannot caU

J NEWTON HATHAWAY M DDrHatbawarAC

SOfChnirh NuhTllle Tnat-VTIolf rrrn wnz

Nervous ak MenThousands of Tonnv and middleaired men are annuallr to a premature

rrxro through IAICCY INUlSCHliTION BXCISHBBB AND ISLOOD-UI8DAILB If Oil ha IIny oCtba follolall Iplom COD I It as bfotsitia1UVJAIC Are mierToel and weak despondent and gloomy before theeyes with dark circles under them weak Irritable palpitation of theheart dreamlandioureIedlmflent In urine pimples on sunken

hollow cheeks careworn expression llfeeu dlstraitful tackeye nights chanffeablt mood weak manand strength tired mornings 4hood stunted otJraaajlrtuu decay bone palti hilt loose SQtO UIfOIto etcOur New Method Ttmc t Will cure yoU

MENS LIFE BLOODNothiug ens be more demoralizing to yOIIlIII4 middleaged men than enmissioss

dt1laltbrorb the urine They euflia man for bmiiIeeU marIt I1llfbt oraecnt habits la yotbcellbsocial No maUer whetherned life or happiness Treatment wlUnatural weakness or excesses our New Methodtinly era TOa GURUS OUA ANTUD NO CURB 140 PAY

No Name Used Without Written Consent

I IIDeforeTreatmea

tountofgoodlU

W A Malr of Itqu 0 ystI was one ofthe connlltu victims early vice at 15 ofare Tile draIns on ay system were weakeatne017 braims a e sexual and nerious lyleD1For ten trIed score of doctors-eiectrlcbeltaudp4telitlflediCin Sombelnienonecured 1 ap hi dpalr in-

tact contemplating lclil when a friend ad-

vised me as a last retort to glee the NewMethod Trcatmaas of Or K 4 K a fairtrial Without confidence I contented and lathree months I WI a cured moan I was curedlena years ago am married andhartll K A X to afflicted

fellowmenAfter

Tile

Knows

honest

urinaryPalOIUIDnt

We

reattlltttt 13xrTe treat sod cure Varlcocele Gmltsloai Nerrons Dttnity Hemiaai neaKoeuCleat Stricture Unnatural Dlscharcts Belt Abuse KWne and liladdar

SJ Diseases and itt diseases of Men and Women

NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT PRIVATE NeIONO lent Co D No names on boxes or CBTclopes ETtrythlnt coafldcnUal

finettloa list aDd cost ot treatment Hl B-

S DR Kennedy KerganS

eaa fflfagsaC K KK KK KAK KK K r tV K > 1 11