HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-5-24, Page 3eseereiss e,les,stsees,
....>0.00.00.00.00,0<x>0,0000.;>000.0„)
,00,00(0<t›0<>04>00,00000.0.c)04,0*0
0(>
c<>t,,' MTIOAL t<3>
IIIG1IWAY
(>0
tz PROJECT.
0*
*, A..t....om Owners Advocate oee
•00 the Buildingot a oveat 00
00 , 00
rant4COntinental Boll,.
00
eso leveret. foe>
•0<> .00
• ‘cos> BY MARK NORBIS.
00 oe>
.00•000qecee>o<>0eeooreo00.000o<>o
zeee00000%000eeeee40e>000000p0
The Automobile Club of AM:erica, al-
ehough a very yonag organization, has
•alveady attracted much attendee by ad-
vocating the building of a national high-
. way from the Atlantic to the Pacific
coast. This is by un means a eery project,
having been talked of on many former oc-
casions, but the men who now come for-
ward as its advocates are so prominent,
influential aud wealthy that it is quite
probable their united efforts will result
in the actual adoption of the plan. Among
• the men who are earnest supporters of
the national highway scheme are General
Miles, John Jacob Astor, Colonel Albert
A. Pope and Julian Hawthorne.
It is proposed to build the road for gen-
sera' use and to make it a great transcon-
Sinental boulevard running from ocean to
•ocean. Not only would euch a road be
a great convenience to users of automo-
biles and bicycles, but it would have its
local benefits and form a great military
highway. Thus it would serve a three-
fold purpose -recreative, utilitarian and
military. The farmer could haul his
produce over it for great distances, own-
ers of automobiles and bicycles would
use it for. touring, and when necessary
Uncle Sam could march his troops over
In the early days of the republic ouch
,it project was enthusiastically discussed,
lout that was as far as it went. The men
who now revive the plan believe that the
time has come when it can be successful-
ly carried out. It would not be necessary
to build an entirely 'new road for the
whole distance, as there now exist fairly
good roads between most of the large
oities east of the Mississippi. All that
would be needed would be to improve
-certain stretches and build connecting
links. In the western states, however,
long stretches of roadwould have to be
constructed.
- The Automobile Club of America,
which revives the project, numbers
among its members men from all parts of
the coentry; although its headquarters
THE MODE.
elelete Illustrate the 1i -extremes et'
LettiOt and Shortness.
Skises, lustetel ot becoming shorter,
seem se ee griming longer.' This leas had
the appaseetisSeoittredietoey effect of M-
enet-11g teeny women to eaopt,.. ger Walk-
ing, a sleet which escepes the gsoued by
seeeral inches. Tee skirt ot fashionable
leegth being utterly atepoesible for pe-
eeetrianism, they decide to 'Mee a 00e-
nutie ins that Sptli. PUI,POSe Made in
suitable way, and tetW the change has
eine ebotet. feeitesally .speaking, how- .
ev, Skirts are You long nil around,
with e (heeded train. Even the dress of
young eirls C(WIS • tee effluence of the
style, turd refieleie eta., feet instead of
ceasing at the beet tops,
These isels greater variety permitted
lu the feshiouable costume of today than
in teat ofyeass pest. This tetteency 10
eelectieism bas been steadily inceeasing
Lor a long time, and as a rcu1t, More
PRESIDENT GEORGE F. ORAmBER.LAIII,
are in New York. George F. Chamber'
lain of that city is the acting president.
The club was organized on June 7,
1800, and was sacceesful esom the start.
After orgenizing the club and placing it
on a sound enfincial and social founda-
tion, the first active work done was in the
direction of good roads.
, The drst meeting, held several weeks
ago at the city quarters at the Waldorf-
Astoria, bought together many of the
'xperts on good roads and good road con-
etruction in the country, including Stone,
Harrison, Potter and Fullerton. The
-club's recent dinner at the same place
proved to be a social function to which
many were attracted from the military,
fashionable, business and literary worlds.
The first fruit of the organization's
work has been the appointing el a com-
mittee on the national highway project.
'This committee recently reported resolu-
tions which read in part as follows:
"That the route presenting the most
:feasible line for a national highway from
the Atlantic to the Pacific seems to your
,committee to be between the fortieth and
sforty-second parallels of latitude. This
embraces Boston, from which the route
.could be stretched east to Portland, Me.,
'thea Albany, reached by a great highway
drove New Y.orls, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Washington, Richmond, Charleston,
Sa-
'vannnh and St. Augustine. Front Alba-
, say, running west throng's Syracuse,
Rochester, Buffalo and Niagara Falls;
through 'Erie, Pa.; Cleveland and Toledo,
_Adrian and Coldwater, 'Elkhart
,.-eand South Bend, Incl.; from Chicago to
.Davenport, Des Moines and Council
Bluffs, Ia.; through Omaha, Lincoln and
e'esse Hastings, Neb., starting across the Roelsy
mountains at Denver, reaching Salt
Lake, and thence southwestwardly to Sac-
•rameuto and Sae Francisco, a southern
eine reaching thence to Los Angeles and
ss northerly one Portland, Oe., and Scat -
211e, Wash. '
• 'That in view of the military impor-
tithee' of such a highwey and of the
advnetages to those sections through
whish it would' be built and furthermore
'en view of the eximatile in good eoad
building it would give to the people of 25
ettites, and territories through which it
would•pass the inviter be brought promis
nently to the attention ofthe people of
• the 25 states and territories concerned in
order thati.congSess limy be petitioned to
• authorize the preliminary surveys requir• -
egi 0V such nationel highway, proeicling
ell possible for the comeletion of the ser-
ves, of the section hetsveen Boston and
Chicago the first year, that between Chi-• ,
eago end Omaha the second year, that be-
• tween New York and St. Auguseine the
• geese yeer end the remaining sectione
within the eollowieg yeae."
Times) eesolutions were adopted, and it
es expected that the eationel highway bill
will be presented to congress during the
Wesent cession.
' TAILOR MACE COSTUME.
women are becomingly and appropriately
clothed than when everybede blindly fol-
lowed a fashion because it was the mode.
regardless of its suitability or sense.
A picture is given showing a tailot
made costume of cloth. The skirt is
plain in front and laid in stitched plaits
at the sides and back. The double bo-
lero is short and is bordered with. stets:L-
ille, as are the two pelerines. The coital
aud revers are faced with velvet. The
upper half oh tee eleeseg is laid in stitched
plaits, and the bolero can be worn open
or closed by small straps and gold but
tons. The high' coreelet belt is of vel
vet. The collar, evaeat and plastron are o
silk. The bat of fancy straw has a rip
pled brim and is trimmed with bows o
velvet add a cluster of flowers.
Juni° CuoniBe.
THE. WARDROBE.
Pretty Ad d il ions o the
Weather Outfit.
Warm
A fluffy cravat does a great deal to-
ward rendering elegant the plainest of
costumes, and a vasiety of such accesso-
ries widens the raege of the wardrobe
wonderfully where only a few gowns
Mil be affoteled. .Voluminous 'decora-
tions about the neck and „shoulders have
tong been the mode, end, as they are
usually very becoming, there is no pses-
ent prospect that they will be aban-
doned.
Stitched plaits have Mended the do-
main of wraps, and now there are
straight sacks thus made, to be Worn
with a skirt of the same character.
Crepe de chine and beugaline are
among the favorite summes materials,
They come in all the brigest and delicate
LESSON IX, SECOND QUARTER, INTER-
NATIONAL. SERIES MAY 27.
l'ext of the Lesson. Math. 2Filt, 24-33.
1,1011101'V 'Verses, 31, 33 - Gotden
Texts Math. NM, 98 Commentary
l'rehared Ity the Itev. D. M. Stearns.
fOopysight, 1000, ey D. ee Stearns.]
24. "Aeother parable put lie forth un-
to 111004 saying, Tbe kingdom of heaven
is likened ueto a man which sewed good
oseed in his field." It may be well at the
beginning of this lesson to call attention
to verse IL where ow Lord said that it
was given to tee disciples Lo letww "the
mysteries oe the kingdom," and these
oarables all refer to these "mysteries."
The kingdom of God, or of heaven, is not
a mystery, but something very plain-
ly revealed in the 8cript00es. But that
the kingdom then at hand should be post-
poned and not come till the Kiog's re-
turn, at the end of the age, that was a
mystery not before revealed. These sev-
eu parables describe the nature 01 events
during this interval. We saw in last les-
son how the word of God will be treated.
In this parable the field is the world, the
sower is the Son of Man, and the good
seed is not the word, but those who have
received the word and thus become cbil-
dress of the kingdom (verses 37, 381.
25. "But while men slept his enmity
came and sowed tares among the wheat
and went his way," 'Ilse enemy is the
devil, and the tares are the cbildren of
the wicked one (verses 38, 39). In the
parable of tbe ten virgins it is said that
they all slumbered and slept (Math. xxv.
5). Jouab, the servant of God, slept
while running away from the command
of God; Samson, the servant of God, sleet
in the lap of Deleale Even on the Mount
of Transfiguration Peter and those with
him were heavy with sleep (Luke ix, 321.
Sleep suggests indifference to things
about us. If we are indifferent to the
things of the kingdom. we sleep.
26. Gradually. but surely, the work is
done, whether for good or evil. First,
the blade; then the ear; after that the
full corn in the ear (Mark iv, 28). The
good or the evil does not fully appear
suddenly. Beware of little foxes.
27-29. "An enemy bath done this." It
is not as fully recognized as it should be
that there is an enemy of God and man
who is ever resisting God and seeking to
turn man from Him. His first recorded
utterances are in the line of doubting the
word of God and the love of God (Ger-
iii, 1, 4): He is a liar and a murderer
(John viii. 44), a deceiver ised a destroyer
and will yet gather his hosts against the
Son of God, seeking to overthrow Him
(Rev. xix, 19). His end is the lake of
fire (Rev. xx, 10).
30. "Let both grow together until the
harvest." Verses 39 to 43 explain that
the haryest is the end of the age (not the
end of the world, as manythink, for the
word "world" is properly "age") and that
at that time •the angels shall gather out
of the kingdom all that offend and do in-
iquity ancl east them into a furnace of
fire, and then shall tbe righteous shine
forth as the sun in the kingdom of theie
Father. If anything could be more plain;
17 stated than that the righteous and the
wicked shall continue together i� this
world till the end of the age, let some
one tell how. Where any one can find
authority for believing that the world
shall be all righteous before the end of
the age and the cowing of our Lord I do
not Itnov. He said, on another occasion
that as it was in the days of Noah aud in
the days of Lot so shell it be when He
shall come tleuke xvii, 26). The parable
speaks of the wicked being gathered out
first, and sotne desire to know how this
can agree with the church being caugbt
away first. It is all simplified by the
truth of His coming to the air where ells
saints meet Him (I Thess. iv, 14-18) and
then cowing to the easels with all his
saints (1 Thess. iii, 13; Zech. xiv, 5; Jude
14). The age is to end with great judg-
ments, which will immediately precede
His coming in glory (elatineexiv, 21, 22,
29, 30), but before this great tribulation
Ile will take His own to I-Iimself, where,
with Him, they shnll be safely hid in the
day of the Lord's anger (Isa. xxvi, 20,
21; Zeph. ii, 3; Rev. iii, 10).
31, 32. In this parable the present
phase of the, kingdom, the time of the
mystery, is compered to the least of
seeds, which, instead of becoming a great
herb, becomes a great tree, with the
birds of the air lodging in the branches.
To understand this parable we must re-
member the two preceding and that this
age is not one of outsvard encOurage-
tnent to the child of God. Only a part of
the seed produces children of God, and
only a part of those bear fruit. end
among the children of God the children
of the devil are many. Now we see a
great tree, with birds in the branches.
Does this indicate the church flourishing
and many flocking to it, or is it on the
line of the other two parables and to
sight discouraging? It seems to be all
one discourse, for in verses 34 to 30 we
read that when He bad spoken these
things He sent the multitu.de away and
went into the house with His disciples.
In the parable of the sower the birds. or
fowls of the air, represented the devil,
• who catches away the seed. In this
parable the church, which is in Gores
sight a little flock (Luke 'tie 32). has be-
come a great worldly thing and has re-
ceived into it tneny a Judas and Demas
and Balatim.
33: This parable of the leaven is gen-
erally used to show that the goepel, bke
leaven, is so working that the whole
lutnp, the world. will soon be leavened or
mnde good, but this is a terrible perver-
Won of Scripture. There is not one place
in the Bible where leaven signifies any.
thing good. rt was excluded from the
meat offering (Lev. ii, 11), which typi-
fied our Lord in His pure and holy life.
At Passover time no leaven eves to be
found in the house of an Israelite (ele•
KU. 10). Our Lord compared the evil
teaching of the Pharisees • and the Sad-
ducees to leaven (Math. XVI, 0-12). See
also I Cod v, 6-8; Gal, v, 8, 0. In two
eases Israel was commanded to offer
leaven with their offerings, but in ends
case it wee to typify the evil that was in
them even as they came to 'worship God.
and it was met by the blood of the sac-
rifice (Lev. vii, 13; xxiii,17, 18). Thsough
one of the peophets [-le sale thee they
shukI offer a sacrifice of thangegiving
with leaven, for that was jest like them
(Amos iv, 5). What are, We tatight here.
them bet that the woman, the chinch,
will so corrupt her food tbet it shall be
Wholly corrupted ere the endof. the nee'?
How leech corrupted it is even now let
the topics of Seedily discoorses AS Rh-
hOhneVtl in the eiteers teethe.. Preto a
hater reepived tteley I quote a sviitcliCe:
"We liftee ninny chi/settee. it is tree, bot
TAILORED COSTUME.
colors and are of double width. Fese
fabrics are more charming than these,
which have just enough wool in them
to reside'. the folds soft and pliable svithe
out a tendency to crush. and become
stringy.
'The illustration ehows a costume of
gray cloth. • The tablier of the skirt is
covered with fine Intsidine and there
rive pointed tabs at 2' top, with osna-
niental etitching. !ale .4111 bodice has a
braided plastron et the back and front,
while over the shouldere are three stitch-
ed bands, forming a sort. of triele 500'
110112. • Ence band. has it eingle button,
and one fastens the stitched collate The
belt is ale() stitched end secured at the
back by buttons.' The WU of ficelle
horselmir Wesel is trimmed with the
silnee braid and With, coquilles of eine
and talle, while at the left side nee
two black DILIMOS. JIJDIC CITOLLET.
,
ire ICneiv Wbenq.:.
"Wllete Wt1.`h yell limo Thomae?"' tisk.
.
, . , .
ed the leacher, eying the nosy pepil over
Isis gleeSee. ,
"Borsi its eine' tinswesed Hie fele:Mende
„
Farmers Propose to Start a
New Factory in Walkerton
Over $3o,000 Worth of Stock IN;ow
ll'akeri. Up by Farmers.
Provisional nhvotors:--Jacob Waechter, Adam Seegr,
miller, John itieLeard3 Makeilm ligoNtuen, Mem. Hay,
Geo. Lamont ; Seoretary-Treas.5 JamesTeiten.
EVERY FARMER HAS AN OPPORTUNITY TO TAKE STOCE
The enormoue growth of else de- just a choiee of cheap t‘vine or large
mend foe binder twine doeing recent dividends with the shareholders. In -
years lea.s caused many tboughtftil eluding Mr. Higgins' subscription,
farmers to give it more than passing 'there ts now ever e4,0,000 subscribed,
otteution. It is an axtiele as inclis- leaving about $16,000 yet, to be sub-
Pensahle on a modern farm as anY seribed. This amount it is expected
imPlement the farmer uses. The ime will be taken up before June 15. Build-
meese quantity impoeted from the ing operations will memmemm 0.0 0000 factory and, others; es, that thee a
large dividend or e lower ' price eel -
Ida twine, • and IS a fartneree '
ceConelle'Pl'aenilYe'couiposedfl iosf farmer'e'll
thes4
reff.a)nre, '
rest, with the farmers themselves. '
FINE SITUAT TON 015 leACT.CeleY,
t‘ilvTellikte,ieeerh)tee'oo:pic.)sleandgilts.i.i.iu.tiaelle,tloii)11.,etiairtef
enc,ouofxitft'iloeelast(E), r03:1ti:
Ontario, .Bruee, Huron, eVetling,tors 211(1
Gftleotv
eYtl'esreine
P.gl' t21 lhaarnan
g eorysi
'gllaila17
01'
tl area Itt
tee country.
NO W*ATEleED STOCIK•
ecjTualtijeat;ely Enveprete
yvadoeielaces
r otifocleithe: utfats_
scribee. ea_pital, es represented III
ITOUR L1A13IfeTTY,
iebre is a limited liability company'
to be fincorporatecl• under the levee ef
001111010, litee lame says that sio 31 stele
}solder liaele for one oases more (110.11
he subscribes for. Thus if a Irian sale-
ees:ibes; for $1e0.00 Ite vould lose only,
ele100.00 in case the company failed. upi
He, cannot be called on for any furtli--
tehraanssheesenissiee:ctrsi'bellsoftoluene cent ra()re ,
itt oa.se tee stock. is overs subserib-
ed those subscriptions seeeived feret
wapivilitbeeatiaocioLepted. Post mark o•n
envelope toi be eotmicles'edi• as date of '
A,' PAYING 13USIN.ESS.
No bindee ewine f.aetory ever fiiit- '
ed up. Every, one of(them hue, nnie)e •
money, Tate difterence betWeen Letts
States and the astonishing profits as ;$60,000 has been subscribed and if twine,t'firtss',wediltb°evirdinchieseeewne,pdeeP.'°'ekthePl
tor'IL-
1 :tI'd
made bY the mile' exellesiee twine face the e$60,000 is never reached no calls
tory in Canada have tended to still will ever
further increase the interest of' think- a.mount is reached a ten' per cent. call
be made,. When that hard ca's1:7e chvirlencis'' while' °the'. -f`Le-
ing farmers iia the matter. • 4 will be made some time in Jelly sleet itentls1.-esEeaereeyiafragrmei-Yer oinvnOeiditeab7io heafdll'als;
igalion returns of 1898 and 1890 show, nothing need be paid itill then'. Ail opportunity to become, e. part owelee
A eomparison of the• trade and• nav- and the balanee as rec u'ired. So tha"t
-1arge, Treasurer, 1Mr. James Tolton °PP
in the otlaer faotores if he had been.
soc minded, but mann of them lele thke
two important: points in connection moneys are to be paid to the Secretary•-
twitie and the proportion of that used • •
The plant which the conipany pro- giado-leydeetuoiatizy us_lpipwahnaft.tthhee_ f acrampiteitralis.see_
with this question, viz., theI
n•a.tural growth in the consumption of
Tel'E FACTORY PLANT.
fill the demand. poses eto erect is fused to. The, question is, wi. 1110
farmer take up this opportunity or
in, Canada whieh eurest be importedt to
the very neevest. tet the capstalise get it as en. Lb°
ti 1 faille bads neon Ins reeellee- hieYele eesetons, (>1))! (((20. sermons, efe
tious of the eatechism.-Chicago het,feeil as, WO would see Josus.
1898.-eAmount imported into Can- It. requires less help and less ex- other case? One.or other is going to
1899.-10,629,286 pounds worth, Canada. Teseine ean be made better. chance. He -will have till ;filly 1 nest
$818.412. Of this amount Ontario and cheaper in it than any other. to say wnether he is going to. own.
ueed 6,768,411 pounds, worth' 5561,328, The (machines are largely automatic. it and, get the profits or, whether he_
or over three-fifths of the entire Every farmer who bas seen the twine is going, to- let the capitalist have it.
amount imported into Canada for pronounces it the best be has ever what do you say, reader?
that year. le: will be seen from these horanadtliecdk. inIttvaabsnoleuatdelley, caannantohtisknoiat '
figures that the increase in. consump-
itself -would help it to gain a market Now eYvCeTyltfa°rPmiDe°rRTWITTrYe.ads" this.
tion about. 41e per cent. per annum
and that Ontario is as Yet the eenter in competition with any other twine, has the. privilege of becoming a seoele
of the trade in (hes articie• The in-. even •if the company did not have a holder. Belosv is printed a subscrip-
in large market among its own stock- tion hea.ding with a blank to 1111 out_
crease is act:muted for largely
grain, holders. The twine is balled on an Cut this out and write your name. dn.
the increased acreage under
to the °petting of new lands, in-
ada;-6,313,818 pounds, worth 5366,718, pense to run than any other plant in get its but the farmer is getting first,
crease in the use, of binding imple-
ments, and to some extent, better
crops. It however all goes to prove
that the trade .is a growing one.
Only one factory operated by pri-
vate capital is engaged in manufac-
turing binder twine and that one
last year declared the astonishing
dividend of 100 per cent. on its cap-
ital In 1898its profits were 60 per
cen.t., and during ilia six or seven
years' existence lee dividends have
never been less than ten per cent.
The first year this concern was in
business it eut th.e price of binder
twine in two and made money that
ye.ar.
Now that the question has occur-
red to many farmers why should
they not make their owsi twine
and pocket these profits.
Many remember to thele regret the
lost opportunity to acquire some of
that etook, whieh last year paid a
hundred per cent. dividend into the
pockets of capitalists, wh'o were alive
enough to invest where the farmers
had refused to. It will be remembered
that the farmers of Ontario were in-
vited; even begged, to take this stock,
but they refused it and lost a golden
opportunity.
PROPOSED FACTORY AT WALK -
ERTON.
In the county of 13ruce several
wideawake farmers had taken stook,
and of coarse know how well it has
paid them. A number of thew_ began
an agitation in February last to have
a factory started in Walkerton.. A
committee was formed and negotia-
tions were entered into with several
parties in regard to promoting the
company and establishing a plant.
Finally arrangements were closed
with Mr. C. L. Higgins, of 'Montreal,
who a.greed to promote the company
and. put in a plant for a three ton
plant with buildings and power suf-
ficient to make it a five ton plant
by simply adding a few more neces-
sary mochines.
The company is being orga.nized on
prad.ent elb,e total capitaliza-
tion will be 5125,000.00 in ten dollar
shares. Of this amount about S38,50(e,
evorth of stock will xemain in trea-
sury of the company, or be sold at
ehe discretion of the directors, leav-
ing a total paid up capital of 586,500
or thereabouts. Mr. Higgins agrees
to take 510,000 of this etoek himself,
thus demonstrating his faith in the
enterprise. He. will pay his calls in
cash just as any other stockholder
would. Now for the 586,500 capital
the conapany-will have a working cap-
ital in cash 61 525,000, and a com-
plete plant with all necessary build-
ings, in full running order with a
capacity of 3 tons a day, and this may
be doubled in rush. seasons by Work-
ing a night eleft. Mr. Higgins' agree-
ment IP tO give the company a full
and complete working plant.
WHO THE DIRECTORS ARE.
On March 21 a meeting of farmers
was held he the, town hall, Walkertoe,
and .over .two hundred farmers took
stock •ces that occasion. Since then
over 530,000 has been subscribed by
over 2,000 farmers. means that
before the balance of 586500 is sub-
scribed, between 4,000 and 5,000 farm-
ers will be stockholders, and every
one of them a easterner and an agent.
Thus the compacts/ will have a mat-
ket among its own stockboldere. '
At the first mectitigSin Walketton
the following provisional officers were
elected es -James Tollion, Secretary-
Treassiter ; Direfitoes, Jedsols Wench
, -
ter, Adam Sew -smiler, John McLean,
Malcolm MeNiven, Alex. Ray and Geo.
Lamont, all well known farmers of
the distrait.
The feeling among the provieionale
directors is that the company shotildi
pay a: moderate disehlend of, say, 1.0
per cent. and put the balance of. the,
big profits ,useally ramie into ciscap-
ening the twine to the eonsumme
However, (hie ie. a question to be dettle
Wieh by tile permanent beard when
eleeted. As every shareholder has a
Voice, in electing the direetors, thee
Matiele can be handled. according to ,
the Wishes ot the shareholders. It is
even tension, and is not cramped in the first space. The second is blank for
the interior, thus allowing it to, come the seal., In the third space write the
out evenly and without knots. A tag amount in dollars your wish to sub -
will be attached to the end to pull scribe which must be, 10 or a multiple.
out, so that there, will he no possibil- Under the date put the month and cloy
ity of pulling fronal the wrong side. I and date of sufoseription with your
This tag will also tell what grade the P.O. address. Have it witnessed by a
twine is, whether it is Ma.nilla,Sisal, second earty. Put it into an envelope
co. Mixed. No twine mill be sold for and mail to the publisher of this easier.
The question; has often been asked, Int 3"),',,°,illthhoativtenOnteaastnadMibilehwanildlypsaeyndtbi:..
enything but what it is.
haw muchwill the farmee stack- postage. This semple plan will ene
holder save? The reply is that he title you to svhatever amount of stoek
will save it Eithen he will get a you want.
,
tei•z• P rt GIO 0.
10
0
02
1.4
22
11
12
12
•-ss
ln
12
•tt
0
a - g "-
1:27' fnp &.) ^. E R E ,9••
7
Ot.. 00212
0•,•• - -s
0.0
wa_
... ;An 0
.0(300, (11,;-:
°C0,9,PCS! p.1
- o (' <•-, ri• •..5"o
5 e- 0 gs Ts- se Fs' es 5'
o E‘'...p ..p f•c° 5.E
0 o - 0 tt
'CJ CD
;7P;"- ..(.0.3 0Q.
rD .es a 5 e, Eeirs-'7 e "s„ 2- 0 3
51 On'00 o o
p=" .DF n .73 • 42,
P.) e' e 0
(7 2 9 5' 0
g E• 0 3 5 n
• P. 7., < g" ° c*:a ,g
ra: .f" 2 CD
e es see a. VI 0.
0.1
'?‘ 17' rp C4 2 IN -6
s.a7 d',L, ), 5_
1211
67- el 6 n ee te see of;
g or) -0 -
• 5-.1,, a ca. E;
4°. 7!. 'eel' 7 :(
= ;
Za DI• D.H'L t•:. r
sae: m p c.r,
5..
-. 8.a 2 E -r. p -
c12
„, 5' e 'ee e
° clea• e'.`7c. ()ere .° f'7'. -e
e ter o o g.; Eg
C) • '
tin
020,
- =:;-! o 3 5 • pa. ec _
Rcp • ::2
ref"
ec4 r`ir
`.e .„re, S 10.0 „
r _sees. ”.k (;:•,.
r.
..,07; .84 70 Mr;
n CR :2 0
0 C CD
-0 e
ee
11
0.
iro
tItt) -9;
•-••••z
C2-• ,t 34 '96 10;;'
0 0
" ° trg r') 'V- V•''
E.• 3. 3-
o 2..
P c'0
s, rD
Too Many Nantes.
About two years before elr. Sawyer
retired from the senate his mall one
morning, contained a touching letter
from a man in Maryland WbOSe 1101M
had just been brigbiebed by tbear
riVal of a bonneing boy. The fond
parent went • on to tell that tbe boy
would 7ie named Plilletus SaWyer
Jones and eXpreseed the lsepe that n10:.
child would grow up an. honor to the
name and the possessor of the fine
traits of eharecter that dietinguieleed•
the geriarone hearted Irian whose name
would be bottle by himself.
Senator Sawyer Went to the senate
chamber with a Warm glow in his
heart and the determination to send
that fond parent tt Mee big cheek. He
felt se good that he ehoeved the letter
to Senator Allieen. The Iowa Man
chuckled as he read it and nrodneed
letter almost identical, except that the
young prodigy was to be named Wil-
liam Allison Jones.
It Was too good to keep, and they
told the story to Senator Edmunds of
Vermont. That -stately old gentleman
melted sufficiently to smilingly produce
a letter of similar purport. Then there
ensued a comparison of senatorMI
notes, showing that tete yotithful Mary-
lander bad been fdiely loaded with dis-
tingetsbed nantds 1310111 Justin e,
Jamest to Don Cameron Jones. net
lqarylatad infant received no birthday
present. -Milwaukee Wisconsin.
A Geresen physician explains why
red hrtired eersons seldom seem to get .
90 beld :is others. 11011 hairs' are 50
thiek that 00,000 (never a fiend as well:
as 1.00,000 lilond or 10e,000 black heirs.
•
5.