The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 22, 1907, Page 35, Image 35

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    THE OREGON SUNDAY, JOURNAU ' PORTLAND, ; SUNDAY MORNING.
SEPTEMBER 22. 1007.
't' It.
. ' r.- .
AUSTRIAN ARCHDUKES
BIGGEST EADHEAS
TJiey Are Exempt From
Taxes and Cutomj Dues;
Ticy Spend Notkintf on Pota?e Stamp?: THey Ar Allowed the Free Use of ike Telegrapn- and Telephone Wre to Any Extent; 'THe Soldiers Do Tteir Worki (or iNotnintf
Bf U H. Beott.
(Written for The Journal.)
t li l food thln to be an Austrian
archduke and perhaps next but to
that is to be an archduchess. For
besides exalted rank and all the
outward pomp and ahow attendant
4mm it thttm ra nthr nr1vllrMi of a
mora concrete nature. Free use of the
'telegraph, telephone and postal aeryloe
T,i Irenerally; special railway favora, free
' Bom from ruitomi duties and no taxes
" to pay; and besides all sorts of fres
service, or rather perhaps forced serv
ice, from tha recruits doing their three
: yean military duty There are other
, nice things connected with being a
member of the Hapshurk dynasty, such
Y ' as tha ahara of the family entailed
! estate, yearly appanage and wedding
' : . dowries, out these re of a more private
' and family nature nn1 lo not so greatly
' ' ' af feet tha public at large.
' But the first named class of prlvl
;V. leges, those connected with the publlo
' utility services, such aa postofflco. rall
and tha like, are often used or
rather abused In such-a way as to cause
' much unnecessary Inconvenience and
sometimes even reel hardships to the
" .', community. For example, when the
heir to tha throne. Archduke Krancli
i -J Ferdinand, goes to tpend a few daya at
' hla beautiful Bohemian country seat at
': -KonoDlscht the residents In tha nelgh-
-,- feorheod soon know It. Let one of them
. go to the village postornee to eena a
.telegram and the chancea are that the
T official refuses to take it In. Or If ha
. does It la quite uncertain when It will
be dispatched. For the office Is already
flooded with meaaages stamped with a
big "8," algnlfylng "staate ' or atate
v terries, which take precedence over all
: tha rest. Theae are the dally messages
V coming and going between the arch
, duke's eaatla and hla people In Vienna
; ;nd eliewhere.
Common People Must Walt
Ha pays nothing for sanding them,
, jbut nevertheless soma private person.
'' . prepared to put down his good money,
J cannot get a wire off because of tha
, 4 mass of free atuff of tha archduke.
There la nothing for him to do but
V'tlther to run tha rlak of hla message
- lying ground the office all day waiting
tranarolaslon or else driving or walking
some 10 miles to tha nearest big office.
To the publlo this Is the more annoying
because the Imperial telegrams are not
' on atate bualneas or of state, or indeed
' any other Importance. On the con-
OP TE5CttBH.
apondenceand mall aervtee. Certain Soldiers Not Exempt.
newspapers, for Instance, follow him to ,. . , ... . , . ,. ,
,,, i . , ,v... . If the postal official don't love the
certain places and not to othera. A . . , ... ... ... ...
. . .. . .. archduke the soldiers like him less: Like
short time ago one of theae papers . . , . , .
. .. ' .Y . the famous John Qllpln the heir to the
ntvBi ii nil n iicij aw uukiil t
trary. they deal only with the most , than can posalbly be Imagined, at picture poatcarda of the archduke and have been aent to hla home in Vienna, tnrone naa a rrugni mina ana sees greax tJn Jf barrlckB although that Is poor are stopped feel aa much ggrly(t l
ordinary things connected with the any rate they seem to require a lot of nlg famuy taken at Konoplacht at a rhtrf wa" lfre,'lt 'u,,1boa1 . 1,he chan t0 exercise this virtue at the en0Ugh. this preference shown to Imperial trad
private family dally life such as orders telegraphing. And what applies to th.; ' ' lru L,, , trrtt arch'?uke.no,t 9"' complained but dtw expna, of tn8 poor recruita. Scorea of Coming to the railway service, the ers as did the picture post card menu
of provlaiona from Vienna for the abus) of (he telecrnph wire applies n ' low rate The prlcea Included free manded that the careless official be . h f h , j archdukes always pay their fares and factureres by the abuae of the free poet
kitchen, and a thousand and one trivial even more to the telephone acrvlce. For ly r'"t?.r.edu l dlaclplined. But first he had to be tne" 'n"1 from the coun ry ana nothing to be al facilities extended to the heir Ut th
" -iu""un iu Baia Tn, public convenience Is onlv throne
innniHiii whinh rauM inst na well hnvn ..... i. i. i. . ... i t ,Mx, circulars came throi
, ben sent through the post But tho so lt easier to talk over the telephone r'"" r JTJJ!if "VnXfn-f iTinn ThLZ fnTV "K ,a 'Zn"$u0tU.1e where JteP1',K an(l forestry are drafted off to Interfered with by the delays In the There Is little sign of th CTrffff at
impniai misrya unu n i- in.uum i., man 10 sena a telegram. Menc ine ' i i . .v. k Vi, Trn C. " "' - i" cnuio me arciuiucai estates nn ao tneir miu- traffic when tney are traveling. And theae
a after hares and pheaa- "trains are stopped for their special con
wire them than to write letters, es-
eclally when they know lt costs noth-
slngle telephone line In the vicinity of
an imprlal country seat arrorns utile
mnvpnUhPA t n the eeneral nubile.
It la not only the residents in the
neighborhood of Konopischt who suf- other Form of Abuses.
iBf.
II
When lt comes to the postofflce serv-
curainuuun. i ni-y iuu man were at worK. Ilium tha entire ..h,i..nl i m..u nrl Hn t),i, ,!( .1 . . n . j i - t -v-
,C yhJ' 100 who were on duty at the time were tary service there, much of it consist- also when as frequently happens fast contrary aa the number of archduke
f'-" ' , ' ' l" "" "cnruiH ing in looaing arter nares ana pneaa- trains ar
the mnlla for nothing and numerous slips of paper both In red and black nni Ai.r, wT,n imnnimmui. In th ,.snnnn.
sarcastic references were made aa to pencil, the name of the placo where parka and grounda are under way the
the heir to the throne gokig Into tho the paper was sent to and the place recruita come In very handy. Squads M0 Trams for Farmer
postcard business. where It oucht to have been sent to. of them are marched about and made wo lramB Ior farmer.
... .w.d0. 1 postal officials greatly Then these aheete were all collected and to do duty aa dummy trees being sWk An express train Is stopped dally
' ". . uuuui iur nere ana mere wnne rrancis reraiiuna
more trounie tnan ju timea tne same tne purpose or identifying the cu Drlt. tnnris off in th llnfe anH wo
01 jiuuiic won cspnciaiiy uui mo noriers seem to nave
rerninand is nard to please, aomethlng was up
''f nenr the Hungarian frontier, to pick up
nd archduchesses increases the publlo
inconvenience may In "jome direction
Increase also. At present there must
be nearly 100 Tlapsburgs big and Httlt
In existence. It Is fortunate that the
entailed estates are pretty large, other'
wise It might be difficult for so many
of them to continue to flourish. At any
fer. For the Archduchesa Marie Valerie.
the emperor's favorite daughter, la aa
i great, an onenaer or nearly ru. nm u.-i . th-. n,nlri11i .k,,,.. nmntlmex
i.in vnoiB irrrtlniinrl Whan the. lre these imperiaa aDuses aomeiimea
rchduCbess Is at her Danube castle, take another form. Not long ago the amount
-.wallsee, tne local teiegrapn wirea are dealera In picture postcards, who can y " " ' ," l" P''ne. m.o.rinmK wus up ana r.ol one or tne best. The soldlera wouldn't mind It so farms of the Archduke Frederick and has, never had any occaalon to worr
. to all practical purposes out of service numhered by hundreda received clr- h?, I!f. wl. VV1S han0-wrl,I,n" corresponded w-lth that on much If they were decently fed but they brln, them Into Vienna as aulcklr a t the succession, at leaat so far am
eo far as the public are concerned. This D numnereo oy nunoreas receivea cir w,t niall matter. When The arch- the fatal newspaper. And that time at have mostly to shift for themselves Drln ' , 0 v lenn ss quicKly as nurnber of eilg bles Is concerned.
Jady has nine Tittle archdukes and arch- culars sent out by the chamberlain of duke goes away many and precise are least the archduke's penal ordera could and their miserable pay only buys them possible. Dairy farmers who are not whon ,, com6a to quality that Is anoth'
; duchesses whose wants axe more numer- Krancla Perdlnand offering to supply the Instructions regarding hla corre- not be executed. far poorer food than they would be get- archdukes and for whom no fast trains er matter. L. IL SCOTT.
em to have known iuat where a clump of trees would look ,ne mil conslgnmenta from the dairy rate the aged En.peror Francis Joseph)
and not one of tha best. The soldiers wouldn't mind It so farms of the Archduke Frederick and haa, never had any occaalon to worr
SALVATION ARMY A MATRIMONIAL BUREAU I
these together. If they can be brought
nto eacn oiner s society more win pe
great Increase In the marriage rate.
nd mat surely is io pe desired.
ALL IRELAND APPLAUDS HER
WILLIAM MURPHYReWi to
' ' I "1 - - M n r T3is4- a- lT oin C. s-rrk taj4 4- - - r n. T , .. Rescues Those Who Are Lonesome. AJ-JyXxA. JVl V
r Lb A. yet this part of our work la new. be Knighted OpCCial Uubllll LqUCT
. . n.. .V . ..,, .-...Mn. that ha llrl Hllv vlnllnr in Irnnm It than 4. nv K ...m.l.. . 1. - al. DUt SO far WS hSVe had great SUCCeSB. "
- f rum me nicagu x 1 luuuc. j ...a.,, E,uBn. i...- - - - j .......... p - " " . u r. v" . , u iv ioaiu ui lua r x - .
J AW mrpir, i . hass nretender a corresponaenco wiin inn young w" tiu. ior iiibiu io win a wne, i nniuin ieni iu wnicn young rolKs are seeking J " uiai no bouii b.b ms young ,
'"m-I. , , , . ' man she has picked out for him. She her-work In the army Miss Coggeshall our aid," said Miss Coggeshrfll. "Chi- folks learn more of our alms and pur-
t 1 The only real, genuine promoter tells him to mention her name In his has made the acquaintance of hundreda cago Is a big place and there are posps they will come In even greater T
I I of matrimony Is the Salvation letter and to tell his prospective bride of young women who either are or countless thousands of young men and numbers. When a young man or wo- I 1
' Jas Army Cupid only adds the fin- tha' bt has the Salvation Army's sane- ought to be on the lookout for a bus- women here who come trom the smaller man gets discouraged and lonesome It I
aru;. v-u.u ' ton of Bny action he may take In the band and she makes lt her duty to put cities of the surrounding states. It takes Is hard to get hold of them They lm- 1 J
lahlns- touches after tne army v,- rLn,iukin i. ihu. in in.i.'h ith ov, nth ih.m . . . ' . . ' . s
ishing touches after the army
has dons ail the hard preliminary work.
And Cupid, pretender that he Is, has
been taking all the credit The Salva
,tlon Army makes marriages that count
and last It Is no trouble to bring
about a marriage In the upper, fashion
able world, wnere the young men and
women have nothing to do save think
about love. The army promoters of
matrimony confine the efforts to the
busy folk the men and women who do
things. The army is not concerned
wHb the love affairs of tha Idle rich.
who hare nothing else to amuse tnem-
ilvi with. Thay make lt a point to
. . . - . iuack .icii. itvov ti m i , v , . . i
join tne young ioik wno nave no aociai lf he naa.t tnat many he ls told to
wait until he can make some more
chance for them to win a wife Through tent to which young folks are seeking ana 1 think that aa soon as the young
matter of winning her friendship. In- these In touch with each other. them a long time to tret arnimlnte.i nd mrlrm that nnhn.iv rnr, fnr thom nnH
variably the girl writes back a friendly One thing Miss Coggeshall does that In many Instances they do not get ac- that they have nothing to live for In
letter, and after that lt Is easy. Miss Is not done by Cupid, and that ls to quatnted at all. If they go any place the world This ls a mistake and we
Coggeshall arranges a meeting between see that her married couples stay mar- It ls to the saloon and dance hall or are trying to prove lt with our social
them as soon as she thinks the time ls rled and that they live as married peo- theatre, and they do not have an oppor- bureau."
ripe and then Bhe leaves lt to the young pie should. tunlty to meet persons of the opposite If the first year's success of the Sal-
counle themaelves. sex. What we are aiming at ls to give vatlon Army's social or matrimonial
Miss Coggeshall requires all appll- How to Reform Drunken Husband. these young folks a chance to meet bureau la to be repeated, and there ls
cants ror me Denerus or me army a eacii oiner. nunareas or young men every Indication that lt will, there Is
matrimonial uuruau 10 iurnion hibi- ioi minor
clasa references. Each of these refer- my hands," said
she flnda the applicant has made raise """" " areas or young women working as out with a vengeance, and If the slngl
pretenses he ls rejected until ne can request mai i una mm a wire ana cieras ana sienograpners Who would blessedness fallacy Isn't disproved It
prove to tne satisiaction or miss ogge- I aid so,
snail tnat ne has auiy repentea. acn
young man Is required to furnish at
least a half dozen good references and
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
UBLIN, Sept i. This Is the story
of the man who wouldn't be
knighted. All Ireland ls ap
plauding the patriotic spirit
shown and laughing at the amus-
asplratlons of the Irish' necrplev nasi
f li rnnrn rf? tVta moulr a rA AmrnmaA. Itari
hand. Six counties Clare, Oalway,
King's, Lettrtm, Longford and Roacom
mon as the oable dispatches already
have told, have been proclaimed under"
the constabulary act of William lVr
which authorizes the viceroy to declare
Ing scene enacted. The atory has Just f district to be In a. disturbed state and!
II. 1 1 ' ' 11 1 1 Bll ClVUllllV'lH. 1 1UI . O Ul
and the work of arresting and Imprison'
Ing all who take any active part In the
movement ror Ireland s emancipation!
i imu a wuMiiuci ing iuu ut earning luoa salaries Douna to oe an upward trend or the to
the head of the army fna w" mignt just as weu De support- marriage thermometer In Chicago. Miss p
in of w u. am i rt Alan V. . V . . - T ... . , , . r . . , . I
Q m. ,. wi.. v . 4 . .."v. a.ou msii mo nun- v.uK8Bnaii, nvai 01 iupia, nas startei ft
e
leaked out The occurrence dates back
to the recent visit of King Edward to
the Irish International exhibition.
It ls said that the king was anxious
confer a knighthood on William Mur-
hy, chairman of the exhibition. Mr.
lurphy. however, had no ambition to
become Sir William, and when, after he
had been presented to the king and his
' opportunities and who otherwise might
miss the blessings that go with double
.harness.
The Salvation Army maintains a st
. clal department, at the head of which
' Is Staff Captain Miss M. Louise Cogge
ahall. The duties of the social de
partment consist chiefly In promoting
.and maintaining marriages. Unlike
" Cupid, the Salvation Army makes mar
riages that last The army matrimonial
promoters stick to the married couples,
aiding them when they have difficulties,
advising, encouraging, and In all ways
making their married progress easy.
The social department of the Salvation
'Army ls the greatest and most Success
ful matrimonial agency In the world.
And It is strictly legitimate. The po
lice never make Inquiries concerning
this matrimonial bureau The police.
In fact, do quite the contrary. It ls
the pol'ce who aid and abet the agency
In every possible way. Not a few of
those young men and women who want
to get married, but have no way of find
ing a mate, are directed to the social
department of the Salvation Army by
the polios.
S67 Marriages Without a Divorce.
Last year the Chicago branch of the
Salvation Army directly Was respon
sible for 867 marriages. And in all of
these not one. couple has sought relief
In the divorce courts. Can Cupid say
ar much of the marriages he claims to
be responsible for? The Salvation Army
matrimonial bureau has only been or
ganized a little over a year and now
the army officials are wondering what
they were thinking about not to have
started It before. They say lt Is the
most successful and popular feature
of their work and they are planning to
extend its benefits as rapidly as they
can.
Miss Coggeshall, head of the matri
monial department of the army, is a
motherly, soft-voiced woman or much
experience and many sorrows. She Is
Just the sort of a woman that a young
man or woman seektng advire or coun
sel In the affairs of the heart could
go to for aid without fear of being dis
appointed. All of those who auk her
to find them a husband or wife are
told that everything possible will be
done for them, and lt ; ls seldom that
she fails to make a match whin only
he starts out to do so. There are bo
many lonesome and heartsick people in
the world, she says, that little outside
influence is necessary to brine them
jtogether In marriage. Just a friendly
third person to break tho Ice for them
la what is mainly needed, according to
li r i intxjry.
friends. The Salvation Army social
secretary does not believe In taking any
chances In getting the wrong sort of a
man. It usually ls the man, she says,
that causes divorces, and the army
wants those whom lt marries to keep
out of the divorce courts.
When Miss Coggeshall was requested
to tell about some of the couples she
had brought together, she said that
there were so many that she could not
think of any particular ones. By coax
ing her memory, however, she was able
to recall the case of a young man who
married a Scandinavian girl and after
wards took her to Minnesota, where
they have a fine farm.
.. He was working at the time mc rather be keeping house for some will not be the fault of the bureau of majesty aiked if or "a sword with which P"rv .,0 B
3al company on the north side yoXia' man- Tha Problem ' t which she ls the directing head. K' the new knlVht Mr Murphy ,on term-
supped quietly away and lost himself
GAVE UP FORTUNE FOR HIS
BRIDE -Father Relents; Son Reconciled
naa uegun. in tne iirsi two uays nearly
40 persons, including J. P. Farrell. M
P. for North Longford, and Mr. Me
Kenna. the candidate for South Longford,
have been arrested, and the farcical
"Judicial" proceedings gone through,
which everyone believes are K prellml--
sending them to prison, for at
Finding Wife for New Arrival.
"The young man's name was Peter
Andersen," she said. "lie said he first
heard of the Salvation Army social de
partment when he was coming to this
country from Sweden. When he got to
Chicago he came to the headquarters Gives Kindly Aid and Advice.
ror a coa
and was making 3 a day. After they
were married he rented a little house
on Sedgwick street and for a time they
got along well together. Then the man
Began to drink. I had heard that he
drank, but he promised so faithfully to
stop that I allowed him to marry one
of my girls. At first he did not drink
much, out he gradually grew worse,
and finally he got to spending all his
money In the saloons. After that I
went to his employers and asked them
not to let him have all his money on
pay day. They agreed to do so, pro
vided he did not object, and I soon con
vinced him, when I got hold of him In
one of his sober periods, that It would
be best for him and hie wife to allow
the coal company to turn over part of
his wages to his wife.
"After that be got. better. With no
money to spend In saloons he did not
drink so much. Whenever I got a
chance I used to visit him In his home
and talk to him on the evils of drink
ing, ffhe poor fellow wanted to stop,
badly enough, but he lacked the will
power. But by keeping at him his wife
and I finally got him to stop entirely.
away ana lost mmseir ah- j ni: .
In the crowd. The king turned round mu:s nouses.
Even In tne days when Balfour vis
and with much blushing and stammer
ing made lt known to me that he was
seeking a wife.' I told him I would see
what I could do arid I will confers that
I began to wonder, aa soon na I found
out what he wanted, lf I could arrango
to make him acquainted with a re
markably pretty little Swedish girl
who worked on the north side. I told
him to come back to see me In a few
days, which he did.
"In tho meantime I spoke to my little
friend on the north side, telling her
that 1 knew a flno young fellow who
was looking for a wife. When I told
her that she threw her arms around my
neck and bepan to cry. po I knew right
nway that she. like Barkis, was wlllln'.
Then I told the young man to write
her a letter and-tell her that he would
like to meet her. He sat right down
nt mv desk and wrote the letter after
my dictation. A day or ro later he
came to me, all smiles, with hl an
swer. Then I arranged, unknown to
them, to have them sleet each other
in my office. I told Tlllie. the girl, to
come down at an hour that I previously
had arranged for him. When they met
they seemed to know, before I had In
troduced them, that they were the
ones that had written.
Marriages Nearly Always Happy.
"Well, they were married within two
months after they met. They wanted
to get married the next week, but I
made them wait until they were sure.
Andersen had some money and with
Miss Coggeshall has applied strictly this he bought a small farm In Mlnne-
tmslness principles to her ma t ri mnn Ih 1
bureau. She keeps all the applicants
for husbands and wives tabulated by
a card system. On each separate card
he writes the name, residence, occupa
tion and description of the young man
or woman seeking a mate. She also
makes each applicant say what sort of
a llfo partner he ls looking for;
whether of light or dark complexion.
b!ue or brown eyes, or of whatever
tjuaiineauons flealrert. .. Wbej this Is
sota, where he has relatives. Tlllie,
now Mrs. Andersen, writes me regularly
every week, and she never forgets t,
remind me that she thinks me the best
woman on earth for having found her
such a fine husband. I never saw a
girl so supremely happy as Tilllo after
she met the young man who later be
came her husband. Before that it was
nothing but a dull round of work for
ner. tne naa rew mends, and more
once was so
"Now he has straightened up and has
paid all his debts, contracted when all
of his money went for drink. I simply
mention this case to show what can
be done sometimes lf there is some one
to give kindly aid and advice. Today
man and wife are happy, and it ls due,
I think, to the fact that she and I kept
after him until we got him to give up
drink. Had we not worked with him
lt Is safe to say there would have been
another divorce suit by this time, for
the poor wife had almost reached the
limit of her endurance on more than
raw occasion when her husband came
home beastly drunk."
Miss Coggeshall requires all her mar
ried couples to write to her regularly.
In this way she keeps tab on them and
whenever there Is a note of complain
she hurries to the home In question to
Be what the trouble la. Often, she
says, there Is a little outbreak that can
can be quelled by a good friend of the
married couple, such as she Is known
to be by all of those whom she has
been Instrumental In marrying. When
she goe out on trips of this Kind she
tries to get to the bottom of the diffi
culty, and then, step by step, the ob
stacles are cleared away.
This certainly ls a practical matri
monial bureau. It Is one that Is single
In Its purpose and whose chief pride
ls the excellence of its work. It ls one
thing for a matrimonial bureau to
marry a couple, but It ls quite another
thing for the matrimonial bureau or
any one else to keep the couples mar
ried. That is the real work and that
Is just the point where Cupid shirks
his duty.
Matrimony by the Card System.
Miss Coggeshall says a great many
of those who take advantage of the
social department of the Salvation
Army are young men and women of for
eign nationality. Those who come to
Chicago alone and have no friends
v'
with (be wword raised and waa just
Sir William." when he noticed there chlef secretary there has been no- morel
waa no kneeling figure In front of him. cynical sweeping aside of the ordinary
The king ls said to have been very and orderly processes of law. Instead!
angry, not at Mr. Murphy, whose right of bringing the nrlsoners before th
to decline the honor he fully recognized.
but at the viceregal officials, who
neglected to find out whether it would
be acceptable or not
magistrates In the district In whlcht
they lived and in which the alleged) of
fenses occurred which, bv the way. are
sembly." "Intimidation" and "lnflanv
m a fdn. Iimviioi.." IV. a nnllna I1,a,j1aj1I
xno ) ui n iniiinmiB tnem to iongiora, wnere a complacent
Effect of Tobacco Act.
duty on Irish-grown tobacco ls al
ready having a beneficial effect One
large factory has been established In
Dublin and is turning out cigars and
smoking tobacco from the Irish-grown
leaf, and now It ls announced that Col
onel Everard. who was one of the .pio
neers of the movement for Irlsn tobacco-growing
has organized a syndl-
resident magistrate went through that
farce of holding a hearing and commit
ted them for trial at the assizes. Therer
no doubt, no effort will be spared to se
cure a packed Jury which will brine In
a verdict of guilty.
The Insincerity of the whole proceed
ing is thrown Into glaring prominence
by the speeches made by British minis
ters only a few days before. In their
desire to make a case against the housm
of lords, which Is at present a sort oC
bogey man to the Liberal Dolitlclana
Winston Churchill, the under-secretary
for the -colonies, who Is regarded as thai
Drincinai moutnniece or tne nrime mm-
- . - ....... . . . im. i v . i . . ii . . , v.
T nl n n AAln1 I- 1.11. 1 . .
Jidin.iu, urbiaicu III nUI'llU niH3t?lTUr-H IIIB
r inR pviripn rpninia mil wn tniiriinr.
cate for the establishment of. a fac
tory at Navan, which ls In the heart
of the Irish tobacco-growing district
Irish tobacco can now be bought In
rnost of the towns and cities of Ire
land and the dealers report a growing
demand for lt. It is stated that In-
quiriBB imrt ueen maue uy buihd ji lmo a violent srKatlon In Ireland during th(Tr
great tobacco manufacturers In Belfast winter would surely follow and woulitf
who have heretofore relied exclusively Justified. The lords "mutilated" thffji
nn thA American Hlinr.lv. to fiSCArtnin hill mnrh tf tVtn ,.! la ma nnht til
whether thev can rely on an adequate Liberal politicians who desire 'to. us4u?
supply of certain grades of Irish-grown Ireland as a stalking-horse in their waP"'
tobacco. One large firm is said to have on the aristocracy, and two days latejn"
experimented extensively with the Irish the policy of suppression was adopteiiCJ
leaf and to have found lt more suitable bv the Liberal government without evehfjf
ine excuse or violence. Tne alleged orw.
Tenses ror wnicn the men or Longrorca
were arrested were committed, lf com
mitted at all. In connection with a cattle-drive
from tho farm of a most ob
noxious grazier. Exactly the same thing:
has been going on for months all over
the west of Ireland, and the a-overnment
was oulte content to allow the local' au
thorities to deal with it. Now. how-
for certain grades of smoking tobacco
than any which lt has yet used.
No one can read the annual report of
tlw registrar - general for Ireland,
which has Just been Issued, without be
ing struck by the fatal effect of Eng
land's criminal policy In the govern
ment of Ireland. In spite of all the
reforms which English politicians are
so apt to boast about, tne population is ever tnnt parliament ls no longer sit
still steadily declining, in spue or tne ting and there ls no possibility of em
fact that the birth rate is still well In barrasslng questions being asked, th
advance of the death rate. ,In 1906 policy of dragooning Ireland Is adopted,
there were 103,536 births In Ireland and It Is quite possible that the government.
74,427 deaths, but 35,34 persons emi- will be hoist by Its own netard, and that
grated, making a net loss to the popu- Its repressive action will have the ef
latlon of 8,235. The population In 1906 feet of uniting all the elements In th
was 4.338,006; In 1896 lt waa 4,642,061. Irish nation in a new struggle for fn
and every year since then shows a de- dependence.
ciine.
Indict British, Rule. '
Another significant, feature In the re
port Is the table of deaths from tuber
culous diseases , compared with similar
than flll'A Wa u i vtlv iHiannnlnfu li i.r.. , Thou . u i m nliuu, .1..
Z. Wi tZ r jt 1 u"? una uiBi-ourfiKcu tnnt i orten iearea sue so mey arm into tne army neaaquar
L i f'tas a couple that she thinks would do away with herself. Now she ters. There they learn of the social
, cn wKeiiier, ncj men Bno
pegins ner real business of
uwm.
After satisfying herself
N
ANTONIO ZELAYA.
EW YORK. Sept. 7. Reconcllla- fell in love with her. The NicOraguan
tlon with his father marks an- legation had him shipped to his home
How Not to Sleep.
From Puck.
Don't sleep on your left side, for tt
causes too great a pressure on the
heart.
Don't sleen on your right side, for It
statistics for England and Scotland. Interferes with the respiration of that
Everyone knows that tuberculosis. Is the Junf- ' ;
t k ... tinn h.,,1 hn,,ini Don't sleep on your stomach, fon that
result of bad sanltaUon. bad housing ,nterferel, wftn tufl re(,plraton of both
and underfeeding. The ngures fur- iungB and makes breathing difficult
nlshed by the registrar-general, there- vm t Bloep on your back fop mm
foraAtitjS2& 18 b
or&'JVoM KnVt" .Yeep sitting in a ohalr. for
deaths! toimBPte uFrtS! yur tor falls into an unnatural posl-
tot-&Alf& MRS "on and you cannot get the necessary
j u -.. ., ...KMsisisi.a tn f4f. relaxation.
land has declined from 3.6 per 1,000 llv- . Do" s sleep standing up. for you mayJ
then she ls happy and I am happy for having bureau and Its Work, and in less than " l" p" wgu- . .v
marrying made her so." no time Mlse Coggeenall has them dulv Tw0 years ago, young Zelaya. who was ,ah discovered Mn Washington br
u . -Mst,f th.ose wbo eek''ths benefits tabulated and classified-under her card studying English in Washington after a bearer of the mewage of forglvei
.hL.i52 ZL 8irl05$"C tLrS!" Lre Sm,,.. ... SJV tWW Point met J Margaret front hit? father, he VJllXg
other e in he-progress of the 8t,t? WW. about to marry-Ift iU .4,, -a.44-Bglan4 Xrom 1.3. ta L. topple over and-crack you skull,
" " ' 1 1 , VJII J, Jfi .. : . months Tie returned and married Miss while in Ireland It haa increased from Don't sleep.
.-...u..,.v .j, .uu xxiB.Br uul uia inner uisownea nun ana 2 4 to s,7. In otner woros Ireland, '
of the president of Nicaragua, being thrown on his own resources he which in 1864 had the lowest death rate TmnmvfMl
to make a living, from thin nrevsntable disease has now
gton by the the highest rate intthe three kingdoms. From the Washington Star,
forgiveness With the nroroiration of narliamant "Are vou fond of Was-narlan mimleT"
TlttB '"h f 'tance young men. Every day. the.y writ, to "While the majority of those whom Bker daurttw of D V. W . iT. rV'iiS'S'A" JSS i..rrT.V.ASV" w.iJ. m.J?J5
1 marrv Ira nt tnralm hl.V .v- m , ' ..V . .V.: . . " - ' T w .f f" f "Y". .. 11
7- vttm iu mw uauH uaiuii nui wm bum u inuf eoiq ior jurauuia na iHinmiAT vim tMM (liamrK mm, ni'JCIl as It USSd to.
are worthy pT each other, ah writes to Miss Coggeshall or visit her person- wa
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