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[Column One]
 
[Column One]
 +
GO, WINTER!
 +
BY JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY.
  
G O , W I N T E R !
+
Go, Winter! Go thy ways! We want again
BY J A M E S W H I T CO M B R I L E Y .
+
The twitter of the bluebird and the wren,  
G o , W i n t e r ! G o t h y w a y s ! W e w a n t a g a i n
+
Leaves ever greener growing and the shine
T h e t w i t t e r o f t h e b l u e b i r d a n d t h e w r e n ,
+
Of Summer’s sun—not thine—
L e a v e s e v e r g r e e n e r g r o w i n g a n d t h e s h i n e
 
O f S u m m e r ’ s s u n — n o t t h i n e —
 
T h e s u n w h i c h m o c k s o u r n e e d o f w a r m t h
 
a n d l o v e
 
A n d a l l t h e h e a r t e n i n g f e r v e n c i e s t h e r e o f .
 
I t s c a r c e h a t h h e a t e n o u g h t o w a r m o u r t h i n
 
P a t h e t i c y e a r n i n g s i n .
 
S o , g e t t h e e f r o m u s ! W e a r e c o l d . G o d w o t ,
 
E v e n a s t h o u a r t . W e r e m e m b e r n o t
 
H o w b l i t h e w e h a i l e d t h y c o m i n g . T h a t
 
w a s , O ,
 
T o o l o n g —t o o l o n g a g o !
 
G e t f r o m a s u t t e r l y . H o ! s u m m e r t h e n
 
shal l s p r e a d h e r g r a s s e s w h e r e t h y s n o w s
 
h a v e b e e n .
 
A n d t h y l a s t i c y f o o t p r i n t m e l t a n d m o l d
 
I n h e r f i r s t m a r i g o l d .
 
— “ G r e e n F i e l d s a n d R u n n i n g B r o o k s . ’ ’
 
F r o m t h e G e r m a n .
 
T r a n s l a t e d f o r t h e E l i o t E p w o r t h i a n .
 
  
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+
The sun which mocks our need of warmth
 +
and love
 +
And all the heartening fervencies thereof.
 +
It scarce hath heat enough to warm our thin
 +
Pathetic yearnings in.
  
F r o m t h e G e r m a n .
+
So, get thee from us! We are cold. God wot,
T r a n s l a t e d f o r t h e E l i o t E p w o r t h i a n .
+
Even as thou art. We remember not
 +
How blithe we hailed thy coming. That
 +
was, O,
 +
Too long—too long ago!
 +
 
 +
Get from as utterly. Ho! summer then
 +
Shall spread her grasses where thy snows
 +
have been.
 +
And thy last icy footprint melt and mold
 +
In her first marigold.
 +
—“Green Fields and Running Brooks.’’
 +
 
 +
[Line Spacer]
 +
 
 +
From the German.
 +
Translated for the Eliot Epworthian.
 
By A. B.
 
By A. B.
 
I.
 
I.
D a s H e r z .
+
Das Herz.
T h e h e a r t h a s c h a m b e r s t w a i n ;
+
The heart has chambers twain ;
I n o n e d w e l l s j o y .
+
In one dwells joy.
A n d i n t h e o t h e r p a i n ,
+
And in the other pain,
W h i l e j o y a w a t c h f u l e y e
+
 
I s k e e p i n g ,
+
While joy a watchful eye
P a i n s l u m b e r s s l y l y n i g h .
+
Is keeping,
O j o y , n e ' e r c e a s e , g o o d c a r e t o t a k e
+
Pain slumbers slyly nigh.
S p e a k l o w !
+
 
T h a t p a i n m a y n o t a w a k e .
+
O joy, ne'er cease, good care to take
N e u m a n n .
+
Speak low !
I I
+
That pain may not awake.
S h e p h e r d ' s S u n d a y - s o n g .
+
Neumann.
T h i s i s t h e d a y o f t h e L o r d ,
+
 
I a m a l o n e b y t h e m e r e :
+
II
O n ly a m o r n i n g b e l l s o u n d s ;
+
Shepherd's Sunday-song.
s i l e n c e is f a r a n d n e a r .
+
 
A n d , a s I b o w , a p a i n l e s s f e a r ,
+
This is the day of the Lord,
A s e c r e t s y m p a t h y , s t e a l s o ’ e r m e
+
I am alone by the mere :
A s i f m a n y h e r e , u n s e e n ,
+
Only a morning bell sounds;  
W e r e p r a y i n g , o n b e n d e d k n e e .
+
Silence is far and near.
B y t h e n e a r n e s s o f t h e s k y ,
+
 
A n d i t s b e a u t y I a m a we d ,
+
And, as I bow, a painless fear,
A l l i s s o s o l e m n a n d t r u e
+
A secret sympathy, steals o’er me
U p o n t h i s d a y o f t h e L o r d .
+
As if many here, unseen,
U h l a n d .
+
Were praying, on bended knee.
 +
 
 +
By the nearness of the sky,
 +
And its beauty I am awed,
 +
All is so solemn and true
 +
Upon this day of the Lord.
 +
Uhland.
 +
 
 +
[Line Spacer]
 +
 
 +
LOCALS.
 +
 
 +
Better terms can be, and are, offered on pianos and organs by D. Lothrop & Co., than can be secured elsewhere, Their business is so extensive, their facilities so great, and their personal application and economy of expen-ses so practical that they stand above all successful competition.
 +
 
 +
All true success is to be found in working with God.
 +
 
 +
W. H. Moore, Dover, N. H. has taken the agency for the celebrated standard patterns the best and most re-liable pattern made. Send me a postal and I will mail you a catalogue free. W. H. Moore, Cabinet Ave., National
 +
Block.
  
[Line Separator]
+
The fourth quarterly conference of
 +
our church will be held at the Vestry, Saturday Jan. 28. Rev. Geo. R. Pal-mer will preside, also will preach on Sunday a. m. of the 29th inst.. and administer the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
  
L O C A L S .
+
Dr. J. L. M. Willis has recently lost his father, Dr. L. M. Willis of Charles-town, Mass. He was once a resident of Eliot and practiced medicine here in
Bet te r te rm s can be, and are , of fered
 
o n p ia n o s a nd o rgans by D. L o th ro p &
 
C o ., than can be secured e lsew h e re ,
 
Th e ir business is so e x te n s iv e , th e ir
 
fa c ilit ie s so g re a t, and th e ir personal
 
a p p lic a tio n and economy o f e xp e n -
 
ses so pract ica l th a t th e y stand above
 
a ll successful com p e t it io n.
 
All t ru e success is to be fo u n d in
 
w o r k in g w ith God.
 
W . H . M o o re , D o v e r , N . H . has
 
ta ke n th e a g e n c y f o r the c e le b ra te d
 
s ta n d a rd p a tte rn s the best and m ost re lia
 
b le p a tte rn made. Send me a p o s ta l
 
and I w i l l m a il y o u a c a ta lo g u e f re e .
 
W . H . M o o r e , C a b in e t A v e . , N a tio n a l
 
B lo ck.
 
T he fo u r th q u a r te r ly c o n fe re n ce o f
 
o u r c h u rch w i l l b e h e ld at th e V e s t ry ,
 
S a tu rd a y J an. 28. Rev. Geo. R. P a lm
 
e r w i l l pre s id e , also w i l l p re a ch on
 
Sunday a . m. o f th e 29th in s t . . an d adm
 
in is te r the S a c ram e n t o f th e L o rd 's
 
S u p p e r.
 
D r . J . L . M . W i l l is hass re c e n t ly lo s t
 
his fa th e r , D r . L . M . W i l l is o f C h a r le s tow
 
n , Mass. He was once a re s id e n t
 
o f E lio t and p ra c tic e d m e d ic in e he re in
 
 
1849.
 
1849.
[End Column One]
 
  
 
[Column Two]
 
[Column Two]
 +
What Books shall We Buy?
 +
 +
What shall we put in our library? This is a delightful question. There are some questions that are so soon answered that they hardly seem worth the asking, and there are others that have to take time and that give one the privilege of turning over and over in one's mind all the possible and pleasant ways of meeting the problem.
 +
 +
This question cannot be answered in a word. One thing can be said, nothing should be put in the library without due consideration. Of course this word due is not so very long a word and it will not be wise to spend so long a time considering that one has no books to read and no time in which to read them. But when their is so little time for reading, as in the case with the most of us it is of great importance that we read that which is great or substantial value. I do not mean by this to exclude what we call light literature, that may be of substantial value as in the crust of a pie which is also supposed to be light. I believe.
  
W h a t B o o k s s h a l l W e B u y ?
+
It is therefore wise to talk over books, to send for the catalogues of such publishers as our book concerns, Harper & Bros., Houghton, Miffins & Co., the Scribners & Co., and read over their list and mark the names of the books that you think you would like. Books that you have heard of, books whose very titles are alluring, will thus be brought to your attention and you will say. 'We must have this one and this one.'
W h a t sh a ll we p u t in o u r lib ra ry ?
+
 
T h is is a d e lig h t fu l q u e s tio n . T h e re
+
Now do not be in a hurry. I have read somewhere, that a house should  never be furnished wholesale; that it is very unwise to start a great furniture store and in one day order all the sofas and chairs and tables and stoves and china and get them as most do under such circumstances, by installment. A house should be furnished one piece at a time, so this writer thus suggestsed.
are some q u e s tio n s th a t a r e so soon answe
+
I have no doubt he would permit the purchase at once of two or three necessary articles, just as I would advise you to buy right away a dictionary and concordance to the Bible and an atlas and such books that are necessary to any library. But the idea is a good one. You get a chair today, you try it before the fire, you see its strong points and the weak ones and the next time you are in town you get another to match it on the other side of the fireplace or you get one a little lower for  sewing &c. In like manner you buy “Green's History of English people.” You get the new Harper’s edition, all full of illustrations and when you have read it, you say I ought to know something about my own land and so you order “Fiskes Beginnings of New England” and that interests you so much that you buy his "Discovery of America” to get a start as it were with the fossil remains of those Americans who flourished here in early times. Now may  be someone will want Mr. Dawsons | “Story of the Earth and Man” to post
red th a t th e y h a rd ly seem w o r th the
 
a s k in g , and th e re are o th e rs th a t have
 
to ta k e t im e and that g iv e one the p r iv ile
 
g e o f tu r n in g o v e r and o v e r in one's
 
m in d a l l the p o s s ib le an d pleasant
 
w a ys o f m e e tin g the p ro b lem .
 
This qu e s tio n ca n n o t be an sw e re d in
 
a w o rd . One th in g can be said, n o th in
 
g sho u ld be put in th e lib r a r y w ith o u t
 
due c o n s id e ra tio n . O f course th is w o rd
 
due is no t so v e ry lo n g a w o rd an d it
 
w i l l not be w ise to spend so lo n g a tim e
 
c o n s id e r in g th a t one has no books to
 
read and no t im e in w h ic h to read th em .
 
B u t when th e ir is so l i t t le tim e fo r re a d in
 
g , as in the case w i th th e most o f us
 
it is o f gre at im p o r ta n c e th a t we read
 
tha t w h ic h is g r e a t o r s u b s ta n tia l
 
v a lu e . I do not mean b y th is to e x c
 
lu d e w hat we c al l lig h t l i te r a tu r e , th a t
 
may be o f s u b s ta n tia l v a lu e as in the
 
c ru s t o f a pie w h ic h is also supposed to
 
be l ig h t . I b e lie ve .
 
It i s th e re fo re w ise to ta lk o v e r books,
 
to send fo r the c a ta lo g u e s o f such p u b lis
 
h e rs as o u r book con cern s , H a rp e r &
 
B ro s ., H o u g h to n , M i ffi n s & C o ., th e
 
S c r ib n e rs & Co ., and read o v e r th e ir lis t
 
and m a rk th e names o f th e b o o k s th a t
 
y o u th in k y o u w o u ld lik e . B oo k s that
 
you h a ve he ard o f , books whose v e ry
 
t it le s are a l lu r in g , w i l l thu s be b ro u g h t
 
to y o u r a tte n tio n and y o u w i l l say.
 
' We m u s t have th is one and th is o n e .'
 
Now do not be in a h u r r y . I have
 
read som ew h e re , th a t a house sho u ld
 
n e v e r be fu rn is h e d w h o le s a le ; th a t i t is
 
v e ry u n w is e to s ta r t a g re a t fu r n i tu r e
 
store and in one d a y o rd e r a ll the sofas
 
and c h a irs and ta b le s and stoves and
 
c h in a and g e t th em as most do u n d e r
 
such c ircum s ta n ce s , b y in s ta llm e n t . A
 
house sh o u ld be fu rn is h e d one piece at
 
a t im e , so th is w r i te r t h u s suggestsed.
 
I have no d o u b t he w o u ld p e rm it the
 
purchase a t once o f tw o o r th re e necessa
 
ry a r t ic le s , ju s t as I w o u ld ad v ise yo u
 
to buy r ig h t aw a y a d ic t io n a ry and
 
con cord ance to the B ib le an d an atla s
 
and such books th a t are necessary to
 
an y l ib r a r y . B u t th e id ea is a good
 
one. Y o u g e t a c h a ir to d a y , yo u t r y it
 
b e fo re the fire , yo u see its s t ro n g p o in ts
 
and the we ak ones and th e n e x t t im e
 
yo u a re in tow n y o u g e t a n o th e r to
 
m a tch i t on th e o th e r side o f th e f ire place
 
o r y o u g e t one a l i t t le lo w e r fo r
 
sewin g & c. In l ik e m a n n e r y o u b u y
 
“ G re e n 's H is to r y o f E n g lis h p e o p le . ”
 
Y o u g e t th e n ew H a rp e r ’ s e d it io n , a ll
 
f u l l o f il lu s t ra t io n s and w h e n y o u have
 
read i t , y o u say I o u g h t to k n o w someth
 
in g a b o u t m y ow n la n d and so y o u o r d
 
e r “ F is ke s B e g in n in g s o f N ew E n g la
 
n d ” and th a t in te re s ts y o u so m u ch th a t
 
y o u b u y his " D is c o v e ry o f A m e r ic a ” to
 
g e t a s ta r t as i t w e re w i th th e fo s s il
 
r em a ins o f those Am e r ic a n s w h o f lo u r ished
 
here in e a r ly tim e s . N o w m a y
 
be s om e o n e w i l l w a n t M r . D aw so n s
 
| “ S to ry o f the E a r th a n d M a n ” to post
 
[End Column Two]
 
  
 
[Column Three]
 
[Column Three]
h im on G e o lo g ic tim e s and o th e rs w i l l
+
him on Geologic times and others will get weary of these prehistoric periods and ask for Seudder's Washington or the Life of the First President by the Senator from Massachusetts. Henry Cabot Lodge. May be a story will be demanded by this time either one of Jane Austea’s or better perhaps Hawthorne's tales of the colonial days.
get w e a ry o f these p re h is to r ic p e r io d s
+
 
and ask fo r Seu d d e r 's W a s h in g to n o r
+
You are getting now into the region of pure literature and tales, essays, poems, &c. are before you.
th e L i fe o f the F irs t P re s id e n t by the
+
 
S e n a to r f rom Massachusetts. H e n ry
+
I would advise you to have in your library “Winchester Short Courses of Reading” Published by Ginn & Co. of Boston, as a guide to what to buy and what to read in the realm of English literature. There is nothing quite so suggestive out on American literature. But. you will want some of the best of our own authors on your shelves. By all means get a good edition of Whittier and Longfellow and Lowell—learn to love them if you do not already. For poetry helps to enrich the soul life. It strengthens the imagination and quickens insight. You will want “Pal-grave’s Golden Treasury” to give yon the master pieces of English Lyric poe-
C a b o t L o d g e . M a y b e a story w i l l be
 
deman ded by th is t im e e ith e r one o f
 
Jane Austea ’s o r b e tte r p e rh a p s H a w th
 
o rn e 's ta le s o f th e c o lo n ia l da ys.
 
Y o u a r e g e t t in g n ow in to the re g io n
 
o f p u re lite ra tu re an d ta le s , essays,
 
poems, & c . a r e b e fo re y o u .
 
I w o u ld ad v ise y o u to h a ve in y o u r
 
l ib r a r y “ W in c h e s te r S h o r t Courses o f
 
Re a d in g ” P u b lish e d by G in n & Co. o f
 
Boston, as a g u id e to w h a t to b u y and
 
w h a t to re a d in the re a lm o f E n g lis h l i t e
 
ra tu re . T h e re is n o th in g q u ite so su g g
 
e s tiv e o u t on A m e r ic a n lite ra tu re . But.
 
y o u w i l l w a n t some o f th e best o f o u r
 
ow n a u th o rs on y o u r she lve s . B y a l l
 
means g e t a go od e d itio n o f W h it t ie r
 
a n d L o n g fe llo w and L o w e ll— le a rn to
 
lo ve th em i f y o u do n o t a lre a d y . F o r
 
p o e try h e lp s to e n r ic h th e sou l l i fe . I t
 
s tre n g th e n s the im a g in a t io n and q u ic k ens
 
in s ig h t . Y o u w i l l w a n t “ P a lg
 
ra v e ’s G o ld e n T re a s u ry ” to g iv e y on
 
th e m a s te r pieces o f E n g lis h L y r ic poet
 
[End Column Three]
 
  
 
[Column Four]
 
[Column Four]
r y b e fo re th e V ic to r ia n era . W hen
+
try before the Victorian era. When you come into the field of fiction. Lorna Doone and Henry Esmond and The Cloister and Heath and Ben Hur and Uncle Tom's Cabin ask for your attention. Do not fear to give time to the old favorites. Get them well into your soul and they, like old friends may be relied on in the emergencies of life, of tales of adventure there is no end. You need some of them. Put Stanley's •Through the Dark Continent'.upon your shelves and look for Mr. Peary's book on Greenland, when it comes out Mr. E. R.. Young has a charming volume called “By Canoe and Dog-Train'' and another entitled “Stories from Indian Wig-wams and Northern Camp-fires'’ both published by Hunt & Eaton that you would do wisely in having on your list. Some scientific reading is good.
yo u c om e in to the fie ld o f f ic tio n . L o rn a
+
I would have, if I were you, the latest Physiology and work on Botany and Zoology &c., to refer to in case any puzzling question came up in your League talks.
Doone an d H e n ry Esmond and T h e
+
 
C lo is te r and Heath and Ben H u r and
+
But I have taken up enough of your columns. Don't forget “Beikies Life
Un c le T om 's C a b in ask fo r y o u r a t te n tio
+
 
n . Do not f ea r to g iv e t im e to th e
+
[CONTINUED ON FOURTH PAGE.]
o ld fa v o r ite s . G e t th em w e ll in to y o u r
+
 
soul and t h e y , lik e o ld fr ie n d s m a y b e
+
[Advertisements]
re lie d on in the em e rg e n c ie s o f l i fe ,
+
GEO. B. FRENCH,
o f tales o f a d v e n tu re th e re is no end.
+
Dry Goods & Carpets,
You need some o f th em . Put S ta n le y 's
+
Largest store and stock of Goods in the State. Established 1869.
•T h ro u g h the D a rk C o n tin e n t'.u p o n y o u r
+
19 Market St., Portsmouth.
shelves and lo o k fo r M r . P e a ry 's bo o k
+
 
on G re e n la n d , w h e n i t comes o u t M r .
+
BACON
E. R.. Y o u n g has a c h a rm in g v o lum e
+
THE JEWELER.
c a lle d “ B y Canoe and D o g -T ra in '' and
+
DOVER, N. H.
a n o th e r e n t it le d “ S to rie s f rom In d ia n
+
 
W ig -w am s and N o r th e rn C am p - f ire s '’
+
WM. STERNS & CO.,
both p u b lis h e d b y H u n t & E a to n that
+
DOVER, N. H.
you w o u ld do w is e ly in h a v in g on y o u r
+
Great Reduction in Ready-Made Garments.
lis t . Some s c ie n tific re a d in g is g o o d .
+
For the next 30 days we shall close out the balance of our Ready-Made Garments at unheard of low prices. Now is the time to secure a bargain. Call and examine.
I w o u ld have, i f I w e re yo u , th e la te s t
+
Special Remnants of Cotton Cloths.
P h y s io lo g y an d w o r k on B o ta n y an d
+
30 to 50 inches wide, direct from the Mills which we arc selling at 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 cents per yard. Call and get; a bargain.
Z o o lo g y & c ., to re fe r t o in c ase a n y p u z z
+
WM. STERNS & CO.,
lin g q u e s tio n came u p in y o u r Le a g u e
+
 
ta lk s .
+
ARE
B u t I h a ve ta k e n up en o u g h o f y o u r
+
YOUR
co lum n s . D o n 't fo rg e t “ B e ik ie s L i fe
+
UPPERS
[C O N T IN U E D O N F O U R T H P A G E .]
+
ON
[End Column Four]
+
EARTH
 +
The shoes on you can't be resouled if you wear em much longer—never outwear shoes— wear new ones while the old ones are being repaired—The Farnham three dollar shoe for ladies’ and gentlemen isn’t as exquisite as the Farnham five dollar shoe but it has five dollars wear in it. All kinds Shoes and Overshoes. All prices.
 +
Lothrops, Farnham & Co., Dover, N. H.
  
[Advertisements Spanning the tops of column three and four]
 
GEO. B. F R E N C H ,
 
D r y G o o d s & C a r p e t s ,
 
L a r g e s t s t o r e a n d s t o c k o f G o o d s in t h e
 
S t a t e . Established 1869.
 
1 9 M a r k e t S t . , P o r t s m o u t h .
 
B A C O N
 
T H E J E W E L E R .
 
D O V E R , N . H .
 
W M . S T E R N S & C O . ,
 
D O V E R , N . H .
 
G r e a t R e d u c t i o n i n R e a d y - M a d e G a r m e n t s .
 
F o r th e n e x t 30 d a y s we shall close o u t the balance o f o u r Re ad y-Ma de G a r m
 
en ts at u n he ard o f low p r ice s . N ow is the tim e to secure a b a rg a in . C a ll and
 
e x am in e .
 
S p e c i a l R e m n a n t s o f C o t t o n C l o t h s .
 
30 to 50 in ch es w id e , d ire c t f rom th e M il ls w h ich w e a rc s e llin g at 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 ,
 
and 7 cents p e r y a rd . C a ll and get; a b a rg a in .
 
W M . S T E R N S & C O . ,
 
A R E
 
Y O U R
 
U P P E R S
 
O N
 
E A R T H
 
T h e s h o e s o n y o u c a n ' t b e r e so u l e d i f y o u w e a r e m m u c h l o n g e r — n e v e r o u t w e a r
 
s h o e s — w e a r n e w o n e s w h i l e t h e o l d o n e s a r e b e i n g r e p a i r e d — T h e F a r n h a m t h r e e
 
d o l l a r s h o e f o r l a d i e s ’ a n d g e n t l e m e n i s n ’ t a s e x q u i s i t e a s t h e F a r n h a m f i v e d o l l a r
 
s h o e b u t i t h a s fi v e d o l l a r s w e a r i n i t . A l l k i n d s S h o e s a n d O v e r s h o e s . A l l p r i c e s .
 
L o t h r o p s , F a r n h a m & C o . , D o v e r , N . H .
 
 
WE ARE NOW OFFERING EXTRA GOOD TRADES IN OUR
 
WE ARE NOW OFFERING EXTRA GOOD TRADES IN OUR
 
CLOAK DEPARTMENT
 
CLOAK DEPARTMENT
 
WE HAVE MARKED DOWN OUR ENTIRE STOCK.
 
WE HAVE MARKED DOWN OUR ENTIRE STOCK.
G o o d W a r m C o m f o r t a b l e G a r m e n t s f o r 9 9 c t s .
+
Good Warm Comfortable Garments for 99 cts.
A n d f rom th a t u p to $ 1 0 .0 0 al l red uce d.
+
And from that up to $10.00 all reduced.
B A R G A I N S I N D R E S S G O O D S .
+
BARGAINS IN DRESS GOODS.
B A R G A I N S I N D O M E S T IC S .
+
BARGAINS IN DOMESTICS.
B A R G A I N S I N C A R P E T S .
+
BARGAINS IN CARPETS.
T H O M A S H . D E A R B O R N E , & C O . ,
+
THOMAS H. DEARBORNE, & CO.,
4 5 2 A N D 4 5 4 C E N T R A L A V E N U E , D o v e r , N e w H a m p s h i r e .
+
452 AND 454 CENTRAL AVENUE, Dover, New Hampshire.
[End Advertisements]
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Latest revision as of 21:40, 7 December 2016

PORTSMOUTH PUBLIC LIBRARY [Pencil scribble line through green stamped text] PORTSMOUTH, NEW HAMPSHIRE 03801 [Pencil scribble line through green stamped text]

ELIOT EPWORTHIAN. VOL.1.[Left aligned] ELIOT, MAINE, JANUARY 1893. [Center aligned] No. 3. [Right aligned]

[Column One] GO, WINTER! BY JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY.

Go, Winter! Go thy ways! We want again The twitter of the bluebird and the wren, Leaves ever greener growing and the shine Of Summer’s sun—not thine—

The sun which mocks our need of warmth and love And all the heartening fervencies thereof. It scarce hath heat enough to warm our thin Pathetic yearnings in.

So, get thee from us! We are cold. God wot, Even as thou art. We remember not How blithe we hailed thy coming. That was, O, Too long—too long ago!

Get from as utterly. Ho! summer then Shall spread her grasses where thy snows have been. And thy last icy footprint melt and mold In her first marigold. —“Green Fields and Running Brooks.’’

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From the German. Translated for the Eliot Epworthian. By A. B. I. Das Herz. The heart has chambers twain ; In one dwells joy. And in the other pain,

While joy a watchful eye Is keeping, Pain slumbers slyly nigh.

O joy, ne'er cease, good care to take Speak low ! That pain may not awake. — Neumann.

II Shepherd's Sunday-song.

This is the day of the Lord, I am alone by the mere : Only a morning bell sounds; Silence is far and near.

And, as I bow, a painless fear, A secret sympathy, steals o’er me As if many here, unseen, Were praying, on bended knee.

By the nearness of the sky, And its beauty I am awed, All is so solemn and true Upon this day of the Lord. — Uhland.

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LOCALS.

Better terms can be, and are, offered on pianos and organs by D. Lothrop & Co., than can be secured elsewhere, Their business is so extensive, their facilities so great, and their personal application and economy of expen-ses so practical that they stand above all successful competition.

All true success is to be found in working with God.

W. H. Moore, Dover, N. H. has taken the agency for the celebrated standard patterns the best and most re-liable pattern made. Send me a postal and I will mail you a catalogue free. W. H. Moore, Cabinet Ave., National Block.

The fourth quarterly conference of our church will be held at the Vestry, Saturday Jan. 28. Rev. Geo. R. Pal-mer will preside, also will preach on Sunday a. m. of the 29th inst.. and administer the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.

Dr. J. L. M. Willis has recently lost his father, Dr. L. M. Willis of Charles-town, Mass. He was once a resident of Eliot and practiced medicine here in 1849.

[Column Two] What Books shall We Buy?

What shall we put in our library? This is a delightful question. There are some questions that are so soon answered that they hardly seem worth the asking, and there are others that have to take time and that give one the privilege of turning over and over in one's mind all the possible and pleasant ways of meeting the problem.

This question cannot be answered in a word. One thing can be said, nothing should be put in the library without due consideration. Of course this word due is not so very long a word and it will not be wise to spend so long a time considering that one has no books to read and no time in which to read them. But when their is so little time for reading, as in the case with the most of us it is of great importance that we read that which is great or substantial value. I do not mean by this to exclude what we call light literature, that may be of substantial value as in the crust of a pie which is also supposed to be light. I believe.

It is therefore wise to talk over books, to send for the catalogues of such publishers as our book concerns, Harper & Bros., Houghton, Miffins & Co., the Scribners & Co., and read over their list and mark the names of the books that you think you would like. Books that you have heard of, books whose very titles are alluring, will thus be brought to your attention and you will say. 'We must have this one and this one.'

Now do not be in a hurry. I have read somewhere, that a house should never be furnished wholesale; that it is very unwise to start a great furniture store and in one day order all the sofas and chairs and tables and stoves and china and get them as most do under such circumstances, by installment. A house should be furnished one piece at a time, so this writer thus suggestsed. I have no doubt he would permit the purchase at once of two or three necessary articles, just as I would advise you to buy right away a dictionary and concordance to the Bible and an atlas and such books that are necessary to any library. But the idea is a good one. You get a chair today, you try it before the fire, you see its strong points and the weak ones and the next time you are in town you get another to match it on the other side of the fireplace or you get one a little lower for sewing &c. In like manner you buy “Green's History of English people.” You get the new Harper’s edition, all full of illustrations and when you have read it, you say I ought to know something about my own land and so you order “Fiskes Beginnings of New England” and that interests you so much that you buy his "Discovery of America” to get a start as it were with the fossil remains of those Americans who flourished here in early times. Now may be someone will want Mr. Dawsons | “Story of the Earth and Man” to post

[Column Three] him on Geologic times and others will get weary of these prehistoric periods and ask for Seudder's Washington or the Life of the First President by the Senator from Massachusetts. Henry Cabot Lodge. May be a story will be demanded by this time either one of Jane Austea’s or better perhaps Hawthorne's tales of the colonial days.

You are getting now into the region of pure literature and tales, essays, poems, &c. are before you.

I would advise you to have in your library “Winchester Short Courses of Reading” Published by Ginn & Co. of Boston, as a guide to what to buy and what to read in the realm of English literature. There is nothing quite so suggestive out on American literature. But. you will want some of the best of our own authors on your shelves. By all means get a good edition of Whittier and Longfellow and Lowell—learn to love them if you do not already. For poetry helps to enrich the soul life. It strengthens the imagination and quickens insight. You will want “Pal-grave’s Golden Treasury” to give yon the master pieces of English Lyric poe-

[Column Four] try before the Victorian era. When you come into the field of fiction. Lorna Doone and Henry Esmond and The Cloister and Heath and Ben Hur and Uncle Tom's Cabin ask for your attention. Do not fear to give time to the old favorites. Get them well into your soul and they, like old friends may be relied on in the emergencies of life, of tales of adventure there is no end. You need some of them. Put Stanley's •Through the Dark Continent'.upon your shelves and look for Mr. Peary's book on Greenland, when it comes out Mr. E. R.. Young has a charming volume called “By Canoe and Dog-Train and another entitled “Stories from Indian Wig-wams and Northern Camp-fires'’ both published by Hunt & Eaton that you would do wisely in having on your list. Some scientific reading is good. I would have, if I were you, the latest Physiology and work on Botany and Zoology &c., to refer to in case any puzzling question came up in your League talks.

But I have taken up enough of your columns. Don't forget “Beikies Life

[CONTINUED ON FOURTH PAGE.]

[Advertisements] GEO. B. FRENCH, Dry Goods & Carpets, Largest store and stock of Goods in the State. Established 1869. 19 Market St., Portsmouth.

BACON THE JEWELER. DOVER, N. H.

WM. STERNS & CO., DOVER, N. H. Great Reduction in Ready-Made Garments. For the next 30 days we shall close out the balance of our Ready-Made Garments at unheard of low prices. Now is the time to secure a bargain. Call and examine. Special Remnants of Cotton Cloths. 30 to 50 inches wide, direct from the Mills which we arc selling at 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 cents per yard. Call and get; a bargain. WM. STERNS & CO.,

ARE YOUR UPPERS ON EARTH The shoes on you can't be resouled if you wear em much longer—never outwear shoes— wear new ones while the old ones are being repaired—The Farnham three dollar shoe for ladies’ and gentlemen isn’t as exquisite as the Farnham five dollar shoe but it has five dollars wear in it. All kinds Shoes and Overshoes. All prices. Lothrops, Farnham & Co., Dover, N. H.

WE ARE NOW OFFERING EXTRA GOOD TRADES IN OUR CLOAK DEPARTMENT WE HAVE MARKED DOWN OUR ENTIRE STOCK. Good Warm Comfortable Garments for 99 cts. And from that up to $10.00 all reduced. BARGAINS IN DRESS GOODS. BARGAINS IN DOMESTICS. BARGAINS IN CARPETS. THOMAS H. DEARBORNE, & CO., 452 AND 454 CENTRAL AVENUE, Dover, New Hampshire.

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