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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1910)
a THE MADRAS PIONEER Issued Each Week crops can do rattoa in much shorter tlmo, owing to the prolonged BUBshlno of the summer day. It may be Bald that the products of Alaska will never HIWTS FOB BERLIN FBATTS. MADRAS OREGON Plenty of land In this country yet. No woman ever expects glad tidings 4o come by telegraph. We (jbserve that President Diaz will "virtually retire." The emphasis Is on the "virtually." Vlnpjnclf. nnrt Pumpkin I'Ich to Di' Mndo nt ISxpufiltion Next Your. The American woman In all her make much Impression upon the giory jB to 00 auown ftt Borlln's Amor- worms rooa Buppiy, out AiasKn is not ,cnu Qvno8iHu i 1910. Preliminary the whol story. There are Immense nrranEemonts for bucIi nn exhibit havo nortnern areas in Canada ana across iBt ,Mn ,nn.in hv Mp. Norma. iCnu- the straits In Slboria that will, with nfi.Lutee. who. dnsnito her Teutonic proper cultivation, produce food In Immo lfl tt natiVo-born American, hnv great abundance The distribution of lug Ju8t ,oft Now York to tnko Ul, hor this food will bo a question of trans- resid0nco in Berlin, the New York portatlon, which is In the way of being Tlmej correspondent says. She Is well solved by the projection and COnstrUC- known in n mnnnirnrlnl winhHtv In thn tion of railroads, through regions Unltod stateg through her connection wmcn were lormeny supposoa to do wlth important musical enterprises. The celebrated Leipzig Philharmonic Papers b?e peop BWI . . r "' i redons of eternal nnow and Ice. A indeed, my boy, the man who won't larg0 porcentage of tho arablo 8urface t'nZ S get up in the morning can't expect to of tho earth is as yet unvexed by the U$n.a ?et up in mo worm. Collector Loeb says peoplo nro be coming moro honest. Mr. Loeb has done what ho could to show them how. Is there a Santa Claus, or Isn't there? If you leave It to us, wo say "yes," and a reckless old boy he Is getting to be, too. A University of Wisconsin professor believes schools should bo kept opon all year. He doesn't seem to care what the boys think of him. Hans Wlntorsteln, toured tho country In .1900 undor Mrs. Knupfel-Lutgo's di rection, and Daniel Frohman Intrust- od Kubelik's first tour of America to her hands a fow years later. Mrs. Knupfel-Lutgo's plan Is to ex hibit feminine America to Germany from all sides, but particularly In tho hoitlft. In nrrinr tn nhntv thnt tho hnna. rr.1 ji. I . 1 1 1 . 1 1 . n ... 1 ' - w 1U uibcubsiuu 01 uiu iibib ui ueai. fl.lp,h . fh TTnlr,, atntaa u.iruul.uu, u. (00 gh0 has pr0D0Sed to transplant Interiors of model dwellings repre- plow. Tho time when tho population will outrun the means of subsistence Is many generations ahead of us, and may perhaps never come, as by the time tho land Is all occupied lntenser cultivation may Indefinitely Increase tho yield of tho soli. been renewed owing to some interest- Professor Hyslop wants $50,000 to carry on the work of psychical re search. This must be an appeal to a philanthropist with the right spirit ing "confessions" of a popular novelist, avow Btntm . v Jm. x. , v... .,.!..... ... ui mkind, from the working woman to uuuulc8a uul "B uiiiiuuiunm. th. nnHotv nnoxn many authors and publishers would Mt Qf turn,ng QUt Bucn world.ramou8 imu iu eu iiiu hsib uiscuiiiuiutm, iui Hereupon arises tho necessity of reconstructing the statue of Liberty Enlightening the World, or of taking It down. Gee-bcrnard Shaw does not like tt The duke3 are not at all afraid that the English people will decide to abol ish the House of Lords. No house of lords has ever been abolished in Eng land. The 5,000 paid by a New York yachtsman to a Bailor for saving his life represents the average value of a life as estimated for American jury awards. In. the sugar Bcandal they are after "the men higher up." When last seen the Bald -men were climbing hastily over the ridgepole and dropping off Into tho alley. in many instances they represent wish es rather than facts, and in some cases they create false Impressions. How ever, the honest lists of best sellers have never given any support to the assertion of some hasty critics that only ephemeral and worthless novels figure In these lists. The fact Is, as the anonymous writer who has con fessed his sins points out, that "the best novels by tho best English and American writers have generally been Included In these lists." Even bo "old- fashioned" a novelist as De Morgan, who makes no concessions to the fads and fancies of the day, has "shared the Ignominy of popular Buccess," to say nothing of Mrs. Wharton, Mrs., Ward, Churchill, Owen Wlster, Hew lett, Wells and others. Undoubtedly many of the best sellers are not litera ture at all, but the qualities which please in them romance, plot, adven ture, humor are generally wholesome and natural. "There are not enough specialties as flap-Jacks, corned-beef hash, pumpkin pies and bther things mother used to make. Special attention will also be be stowed on American feminine toggery, which Is so admired by German and other European women; The department In shbrt is to be a composite of things which make American women, In the estimation of their husbands, the best housekeep ers and the best dressers and, all urounu, uie Desi women in me worm. The promoters of the exposition wel come Mrs. Knupfel-Lutge's project en thusiastically and promise to devote to the department enough space to make It one of the prime attractions of the show. If the management car ries out its purpose of having a bevy of typical Gibson girls recruited from various sections of this country to pre side over the department, the success of the enterprise Is assured beyond the question of a doubt. MaJ. Carson, chief of the bureau of manufactures of BEWARE OF THE MAN WHO TELLS. Uy Hart Kennedy. . ... ... ..I It with. If you have a brlclt nanny, i" " out ceremony to tho man who Is always tell ing you what other peoplo say about you. You will Injure him with tho brick, and you will doubtless he locked up for assault; but you will gain In the end. For you will have rid yourself of a friend who Is moro danger ous than tho most dangerous foo. Gossip In itself Is not a bad thing at a I. And oven scandal Is shorn in a vast measure 01 power to injure when tho person about whom It Is cir culated knows nothing of It. If you don't know what people are saying about you, the thing largoly is, In 0 -feet, not said. And, even if you do know what Is said, absolutely tho best way of dealing with It la to wear a bold, unconscious front. If you do this you will al ways find people to take your part. This Is as true 0 human nature as it Is true that It loves gossip and scandal. It Is the one who tolls who really causes tho trouble This dealer In the truth thnt Is necessarily In part a lie .causes moro mischief than any other kind of criminal. I say criminal advisedly, for tho man or tho woman who lsIn tho habit of telling peoplo what others Bny about them creates far more mischief and causes far moro misery than the moro honest and boldor typo of criminal who Is sent into penal servitude. Tho law Is unable to touch them, I know; but their crimes are those that tho law Is unablo to punish. truly human, good nnd.groa,t. Tho truest love tv hoiiho for truth, open righteousness, innet,! .. 1 i.m.-..i ..." "M,i. gonncHKBo 111 vtuiu, u. unit, nuuu-ail this kiw nfivflln nf tho flrnt nrilor " tn nnnto tho "confessions" further, "to imtlsfv the tne Unlted state3 department of com a TJhiioinhi tit-oom,.,, ,., ,,ncr. nonninr HomnnH nnrt whiio tho nonnio merce and labor, sends word that tho -"""D I . ''W'-- I ,1 . . J l. ... . , ed mattera bo that half a dozen of tho wait they take Inferior books, which " " hnv nn nim h,,t tn o,,n An thoro resi American mercnanis anu manu ic thi ,iiffQr,o. th ,..niw a lacturers in the Berlin show, elB are steady sellers after they disap pear from the lists of best sellers. while tme made-to-order variety Is short-lived and has no hope of resur rection. And this latter fact suggests an adjunct to. the system of ascertain lng and publishing lists of best sellers. These lists, apart from the element of dishonesty that has been charged against some of them, merely Indicate the Btato of the market. What pub lishers and lovers of letters might, do to encourage good work and artistic education is to prepare and furnish semi-annual lists of steady sellers, of novels and volumes of essays,- biogra phy and history that have survived and that stand out as works of merit prettiest young women In his congre gation act as ushers. A largely In creased attendance of men Is reported. A New York widow who possessed Cany millions and might have married ome foreigner with a title has become the wife of an American who Isn't even a colonel on any governor's staff. 4ren't some women strange creatures? It Is one of the most scandalous acts In our national life that it Is not tho Ignorant and degraded elements of society that are the most serious men ace to our Institutions and our com mon life, but representatives of the intelligent and educated classes. COMPETITION AND BROTHERHOOD OF MAN. ' By Prof. George Ii. Foster. How does It come that weaker man has maintained his place upon the earth, while much stronger animals of the primeval world succumbed to their fate long ago? Only through social life, only through tho bond of common, If so be, prlmitivo order, tho Hrst traces of civilization! And the higher hu manity has ascended' tho ladder of develop ment, the clearer Is it to bo seon that tho power which makes man strong to triumph In tho battle of life, thus to till tho law of social progress, consists In Increased capacity to serve the Interests of other men, to understand tho problems of other men, and to serve other men's lives. In fair competition man sees all the foolish schem ing and striving which goes on around him and makes him sorry for the people; he tries to bo strong so that he may not be upset by the general confusion of moral Ideas; he feels that he must be better, even if he stands alone, than all his so-called competitors. If he re mains Btrong, he will become ever stronger, ever freer, a fountain of life, a stirring example for others, show ing them new paths of life. It is ours, then, to seek the best, to excel all who lag behind In that which Is POWER OF MORAL COURAGE IN WAR. liy Lieut. Qui. Reginald C J . , . . . .... . v fls ll in nmi.iui.m u iu mimy mo blOral I 1 11.. xnnti-llultiwl 'fi lnrn.l .. '! victories, ji m Huiucioni io gay ll... 11 M.t. All... . IlKiuii, ch - hj uviiur nnniO you Iu. I lers Into tho dally private and pubeiVl brought tip to treat tholr purenu wim rospect and unsold)! devotion, and in. pastgonoratlons to whom all livltic m,. much Indebted. In Japan tho young men m J of the nobility and wealthy clnsses would think u J t . . n AnvMt. Hill linat vnni . . I . n... ..it ..m.i. ..i . "'IS llHOUOBB llllll llio ivbui ui Duiiinu yiWBUrO, MCaiillP nro taught that it Is wrong not to work Tho causes of courage nro mostly moral. n.l I 1. I .. In If... ...I...... "II some mjHiuriuiiH miiMus m i minus oi ordInin thnt gives n force of character that doterralnfi jj to Ignore or control tho strong natural Inatinct of preservation nnd to accept solf-sacrlllco morof) completely. HoIIkIoub feeling Is a moral causo that prodncJ almost irrcBiHiiuie niorui loroo. wo need onlyrtajj religions eninunmsni oi mo louowcrs of Ka Joshua, Mohammed, Cromwell and scores of othm 1 deed, tho greatest things havo bcou done by uBU uou-icnring meu. FATHER THE BEST ADVISER OF THE BOY, Dy John A, Htn As n matter of atom, hard common i truth, moat of tho ndvlco which toty! given io mo young man in person, long ought to have boon imprewsd upon tit i thor, In ordor that tho growing boy and ;n man might havo been made open to ill that may coma to him in spoken adrktt personal experience. It Un't easy to train the normal boy.ilJ overfull of high spirits nnd lightness of heart tadfetm full of high spirits and lightness of heart and fttti hands. Hut when It Is brought homo to him that i of his heedless actions just a little later iu life mir him out of business" tho application Is direct uli disputable. Hold that boy to his accountabilities u woujd hold tho stranger boy. If you won't do : don't ask that son to do anything. Open, IrruposfJ Idleness Is tho bolter for him by far. Ha Trill tin J better show, wholly without training, than If lsxtlt Indifferently half trained. THE SPEED OF THE PIGEON. 'V,l,,H,,l"?5"l",l,l,l"l,,J,,I',l,,l',i"I' ,3"l,,8,6 Racing pigeons are the fleetest of all creatures. They havo maintained speed of a mile and a halt a minuto fdr a hundred miles, according to writer in Collier's, and they have flown seven hundred miles between Pellacra. The dreaded disease called pellagra the rising and the setting of tho sun is common In Northern Italy, In the Pigeons have flown a thousand miles Bouth of France, In Spain and In coun- back to the home loft. In 1904 a bird Piinflfln tnllra nhnnt nn nrmv r,f KA . flnn mn fni- har nmlrl. n-,t!r.nJ anl Value Works that thO great PUb- L,a f...i,0 nat n an,,hnrn rcurnnn. I o-o,l . l n., .!., , Buch an army would bo too little to be "c Bnoum n, lorex "ow ay DoK3 It begins with an eruption on the skin, hours and fifteen minutes, proving how a menaoe to tho United States and too ..... " " which breaks out In spring, continues unerring Is the mysterious homing In i rnrrnnnaPTi v anrvav r r t itqfo nira t i i big for any other purpose. In either iim autumn and disappears In winter, stinct that will drive them across the tm If will h. nn nnnnilm. r. . ...... llleie are Interesting questions, and Tt nttoa thnoo nnrta nf tho mirfncn mnllniitil nrlthn,,t o,..l.,,. Tint ma try that needs all Its money to develop . proposed ubis oi Bieaoy seners, whIch are aiway8 exposed to the sun test Is not true sport. The birds stm- ,.r """""" u., , "00"0UD and the air. The disease Is accompa- ply hurl themselves against time and critics and thoughtful readers, would nled or preceded by remarkable lassl- space till they are played out. Tney chondriasis and not seldom by suicidal Tho racer rises Into the air with mania. With Its progress and duration heavy, slow wing pulsations, then, once tha disorder becomes more axKravated. noised over tho startlnc nolnt. thorn iiu.e Adopted br nnbbi to Care wlth Bhorter and 'shorter Intervals In Is a swifter, shorter beat, and the time " J . I It 1 .V. Ik. 1 I. U.I. ...,M It. .1. 1- . . wiuiui. iu iciitjiii me auiiuvjo wm is nit up iu inu uiiru iiuu iiuriiianeni to clear Itself, and becomes perma- wing rhythm, rapid and steady as a nently enveloped In a thick, livid, lep- pulse beat, which carries them home. rous crust, Bomewhat resembling the They fly three hundred feet high dried and black skin of a flsh. By this over land, but low over water. TMol time the vital powers are reduced to a enemies as they fly are wind, rain, gun ners and hawks. They do all their lly- GOD HAT) HELPED HIM. Its resources. The race has outlived all its throat 'ened dooms. Physicians tell us that we waste a billion dollars annually be cause potential laborers are needlessly" sick with fevers and tuberculosis, M.l.1.1. .nw I. ...... ITT- 1 "T , " I . Z.. W A story Is told of Rabbi Wlldrewltz, threatened with lumber famines, pulp who ls we known on the ea8t 8,de( luiuiucSj iuuu inimucri auu, yuui 1UIUT ines. And still we survive. Whdjo races have been wiped out through (tip Ignorance of the past, by disease, and by the failure to husband natural re sources. But tho race thrives amain', and nature still proves Inexhaustible We "rise on the stepping stones of our) dead Belves" to better things. the New York Press sayB. A recently arrived skeptic and cynic came to see him onco with a "case" intended to mg Between sunrise and sunset, if caught out ov.ernight, they fend for themselves til) dawn rne noting instinct Is lifelong. ,, Ju B"""clua" "v very low ebb, and not seldom the in tree." He called and begged to be rolWrilfll fnnPtinn M wpH. Tho vir. . , . , , , . . I till lUDta ,liJ VS. 4W IMIUJ i Buuer, uuiu iuo ukouuc, irom ,n1Iv of fhft naln,B nml ,. tnrrnpnt. two maladies. I have a great weak- . fhft vlMm Anv flnd n,ht. To ness I cannot tell the truth, and that theB0 severo aflnctions aro often added During, tluJ' Franco-Prussian War the niirtn m v nniil tfrrlnlv Ann T nnv 1 ,-... m. I f 5 iM . , . To a degree that men of the ear' lost the sense of taste In mv mouth: ! ".!"u.cJnB"""!- .J. "tr.T'" . "... " pigeo" . . ii a ........ ' . i w i w nun nn v.iiii!Hii. lukch liim iii w 11x1:11 wlik uii ilh w iv 111111 rimnnpimrnM Ze nSSaS "2 Ling TnteSIuo-na?- T'wL'8 T" t0DBUe" other raa,ad,e8' 8Uch aa tetanU3' ParlB- The b,rd wnfl Prisoner fo iZ 'Z Tin ?h.i IJJ dropsy, mania ten years. It was then released. It 1 moment, seemea io db nerniexen. nnn i . . .u. . i . 1 , i .. n..i.. . . .... ... . human endeavor and sneculatlrfn " .- - lann inuruBmu, wo oane.u uiuB nt uiwvumieiy ruiuriieu io us om nome. . -- fLBUlu; oiuo ubuiu lo-iuonow. ll IS inof roA,,noA in thn nnnpnrnnr.1. nf a more ana more being raced by men as, la dlfflcult case. j shal, have to reflect I ,immv . malnlv7nnflnpfl tn thtt upon It. If God wills, I shall be able poor re8idlng in the country districts, 10 neip you. men, and not as members of races or as citizens of nations. They agree In Intellectual alms, social desires, hu man feelings; but they differ radically in the speech with which they deflho their alms, their hopes and their de sires. Are they to be forever debar red from completest Interchange, of their ideas and ideals by lack of 'k common speech 7 Are the records of their united action always to be writ ten In diverse tongues? Is the lan guage of science to be shaped by Babel? GREAT NORWEGIAN POET. and la seldom seen In very vounir chii- rrri. il. 11.1 a . . j. 1 II wiien me uauem. reiumeu uexi aay dren. The cause of the disease Is the rabbi brought forth a pill ho had traced 'to tho eating of altered maize, prepared, told the doubly afflicted man m whlch putrefaction occurs during to open ins moutn ana snovea it in. thQ -warm season. The demonstration made this year of tho agricultural possibilities of Alaska may serve to quiet tho alarm of a fall ing food supply. Vegetables raised In tho Tanana valley, within two degrees of the Arctic circle, have been placed on exhibition In the Eastern States surpassing the products of some of the famous market gardening regions, "both In quality and yield, There are potatoes weighing three pounds each, which would take the premium for quality at most any county fair. Tho The pill was of considerable size. Scarcely had tho patient allowed It to dissolve In his mouth when he be gan to spit, with an expression of the greatest disgust, and exclaimed: 'What do you mean? That's tar and sulphur and kerosene you gave mi. Tin vou want to nolnnn mo? Phul!" "Well, what aro you making so JSve mid the Apple. Princess Dtuleep Singh at a dinner in New York' said that she found tho American woman a marvel of beauty and the American man a model of good looks and kindness. "Tho American man," said the charming princess, "is rightly held up to the world as tho pattern husband. much noise about? laughed the rabbi, rn Europe they havo a saying about with great heartiness. Hasn't God per- Eve and the apple which shows how formed a miracle? You have told the wretched a failure the European hus- truth; It ls really tar and sulphur and band Is. This saying ls unknown In kerosene. And you have actually re- America, I am sure. It would have covered tho sense of taste In your no point, no application, hero In the mouth!" land of pattern husbands. The sav. Incr la thla. "'Tha ovll nnn .ll,)..'. l Doubter. " " una umu i. givo i . i. - . 1 . n . i. mn i. . . . . . ... T hnv liifit hn.1 nn Irian luo aVl"v " l" uu- 1 '"8 WOm- .tcvp,,h mp. vnn'ii hnvfl tn nr 8n becauBo the evil ono know well Mlmnn nnrl Riihmlt vnnr Hto '- lu" "uu wwuiu et H ail nimseir. vlaM la anIH tn ho no hlirh no Kifl hnah. f . ... t .. ... but the WOman WOllld en hnlvoo " """" to conennanen neioro i can creau your ets to an acre, mere are caooages, aBsertIon." Houston Post. . Iwr. nl turning heotn mnntrloft -nrrnt nnH A I.eirnl Difference. - rm.. nu . tt . .;. 1IJ01INHTJKUNE IIJOIINBON. BJornstJerne. BJornson, who has been eorlously 111 in Paris, may to called the Grand Old Man of Norwlnn lit erature and drama. Ho was born In 1832, and In 1857 becamo director of parsnips, all larger and finer than the When tho coal supply ls low, ono , , wenw, wm W 1832 and Tn 857 became T rilroVtor average. There are also fine specimens member of the family stays in bed ?pJnlon bTa, w"thJn, Th lh thlSter at Bern Trorl SS! u of wheat, oats, barley, timothy and longer in the morning to keep warm, wyer-l'm too modest to say. But I JJLa alt ni red-top hay. Although the growing and refuses to worry about u. Tha can you what I'm going to charg, lrS L" ason up in that latitude is short, the member Is an Optimist. you for 1L Cleveland Leader. Germany, and from the latter year to ANY BRIdHT BOY WITH TOOLS CAN NOW MAKE AN UP-TO-DATU AEROPLANE ALL BY H1MS0 l L si mi 3 mom m i 1 3KE1XM 13 PUT n TOGETHER FGJ A3T10MJ FINISHED. 9...2l PROPELLER Pitt WITH : RING IU WHICH RUBBER BrWD Ll-rASTLHEIX s' rl6i j2m r6.3 mm or ppopelw -m tin bmm RUBBER MM. ARE 3TRZJ.CS BETWEEN FM fIU PMT HDL VILV MOWM PPOPORTlQia Boys, If you follow those that i "y. first, buy a bamboo Hshpolo. Study tho plan nnd cut pleceioH i- i,u. icfiui. onUl UIt) polo t0 KOt p(!Ce(, ft (.Uf,rtcr of ftn cll vviae, i gives very stout and light rods. Make threo box forms, acenr.itnu- in h ..i.m Don't i holes in the bamboo, hut hind tho ends together with heavy linen tt U,M,C ,WU B,uo' Cover tho tops and ends of these boxes with' linen cloth, tightly stretched, nhm ti, ... twnrv and I paint the cloth with" a mixture which you obtain by shaving a " " ""'' OI "cnzme, allowing tho mlxturo to dlssolvo over HZ Ji U!re b0XC8- 0nQ lfl th0 "ard rudder. It Is 12 & long ana 3V& Inches square. Thn laririmi i .i, ,nin hlnlane. " whioliltnn1?"8 a?d, 6 lnch08 8"Uftro- T1' "nmllor box Is the resr rl S C Bh- The larger box ought to bo well braced wlthM --O..V.,, Ulini i,i ,rni nnd three In tho rear ..f!U ?"? h0 )vlll.8tlltly the plans carefully can boo how tho bo' IT. amr in tneir proper relations. Thn forward box. wbicn i uie lilting, ought to bo tlltod upward. unuerneaiii the aeronlnno fna ... ...... .i. ...m tnv uo nhnr.tr nt... .v ,1 ..' " ruHIlorB, WHICH Yu '..I PastJn on m . n u B,,8ht"' Th0 noxt thlnR fl t0 c"Vo two propdjl Fasten on tho middle of these, with ,nnii ,., tin ntntn nnd Hl 72K0"" .V"? wlf PPeT Pin, which is sho; in tho dr.fl to act as a washe ,,,nCCa btWCon tbo roor and tho .ncheflnZS8' 1.. ought to bo at least & tho othnr tn t , f 10 ena 01 tno rubbew to tho propciior p wio otner to the framework ,.t n -.i .t ........ niiout tlniPH lmlnB n...i V 1W1BI U10 rUPIiui" . times being careful that both propellers are eo.mllv fllm,l." HdW" uoromane wnon holdlnit It ahov ........ nAllnrUP vnnr thtimha ,,ii iiuttu, UOIUIIIK H" " ., . T.! UmA8 untl1 "o ready to allow tho nlano to fly. 0 U mo iuio una roar ruddorn vm. ..,m ... . .". .. oAroi in , . w" " iiimiiy ue auio to direct yum -- v, lXtV irZ- V the'rubbers covoSed Itb tale-if ' uKer man othorwlBo. Theater and editor of tho NorHw Folkeblad. In 1874 ho bought a farm In tho heart of Norway. Whom ).n l. alnco generally spent tho summer at other seasons living much In Paris Homo and the Tyrol. Among his works' that havo been translated Into mn.ii-i. aro two novels of Norwegian peasan life, "A Happy noy" and "Tho Fisher Lass," and among othom 't t itago of tho Kurts," "PftUi Lango" and T.nhnromiia 1T i- "MKU and tnnrnna 1.1. Intool hllVlllIt fl'j f cenUy been in rehearsal at VtWl The axpluntttlou, FrodThoro sooms tb be a lot fnna mnrln nt f loo A a llll(l0f Miss IC's, nnd I am sure Ml by far tho richer volco. 1. yea, but Miss A. has by far the i father. Wh&t h tn.n with a f' 1873 iu director of the ChrisUanla mT . ai .a mo author of au- ntste la a nre-Jnsurance P9lW'