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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1908)
I 0 o o W I O’ —--------------------------------- votion and private moral« m«a«urts well. It 1« an Ironic comment On evr tain tradition* once potent and «till ra garded that Oscar of Sweden, who b» earn« the kingly office so well, ba< y-niiv Qiint scarce fl a drop Ul of so-called “royal” vr o. f even “princely” blood In his vein«. Uh paternal grandfather was John Berna dotte, a French peasant who found a marshal’s baton In his soldier's knap sack. His paternal grandmother »at the daughter of a Marseille« stock bro ker of plebeian extraction. His moth er was the daughter of Eugene ft<o*u barnals, with no claim to MghGr r&n$ by birth than that of the distinctly "lesser nobleRMf’ of Franc* OStsr II. was the second kl«0 «f distinction ot hl« family. There If no qHteklon that John Bernadotte managed hlf afifaia well. Called to bg heir off th« chil% lest ruler over « people of wtea* 'ta> gunge even he wag Ignorant, ba «fl»!* ly preserved «nd enlarged th« degni» lone of the dynasty into which he had been adopted. Non« of th« print»» “made” through the 9U’'’-«8Sas ef the great N«poleon saved so much from ths Napoleonic wreck. Illg gon and th« tint grandson who succeeded him mad« no notable mark upon higtory. Tha second grandson of BSrnadptt» utfl third king of the r«cg had abilities suited to his time» Intelligent, cul tivated, realizing fully th« fovo <iJ democratic Idea« and th« clikng« from the traditional altitude of th« king toward hte subject« which they Involve, he conformed cheerfully t« th« te *cs 11« wa« required to Is « thoroughly "constitutional” mmarcb, and h« played the part with enthusiasm, H« deserved and won for hlnteelf and hie country the respect of ail nation* H» deserved and won ths love of hl« Pho 1 pie. 11« wag th« only fliig of hl« time who could go about hlf aountry lib« any other m«n and ba unattended When h« gr> desired without tear and Without danger. In th« cl<MlT* year« of liia prosperous reign he met with what was, from certain vtewisflnta, a misfortune and at least a mortification. Tber« cam« a day when there must have echoed In bl« «art the word« of sn ancient Scandlnarlan king, so finely paraphrased by an American past: “Whst was that?” »Id Olaf, standing <« , «* V uvat>2<«>nax IS an excuse for •örfnsu. Dy tha Way, whit) la the ex- cg&> Äty ®fun<enn«6fi? Iitntb iC always the Mtn« old Btory, J* Will CO *x*n by the love letter« that court now and then. ¡1’1® Topeka Journal knows a woman *Vho «if! Fu»*» when she gets to UmevOA because she can’t get 8 halo to Wilt her." Odu a term«« Who sell« pnttrved aggg, With the gtttemeint that they gre fees» laid, pg « (’hrlellan and have ll'dU) df t glorlou« hereafter? Srtll, It Beemg crtiel for Tom Lew- •09i to fiewert th« country in it« hour of trial, merely fo? the purpose of mak Utg a few beggarly million« himself. AO Ohio convict made <20,(NX) while Moving a five-year term In the penl- TUBti apy. Some people are ouch flnan- (4«1 gvnlugag that they can mage «metey •ay «ter* Mr Rockefeller 1« pleated thought of being regarded as • No dottbt b« find« it a bl«6S«d that a man duteu’t hAv« to be be patriotic at th« patriot. thought ¡M<r to X<wn L««eon h<>i*» th« country Will Sit «till and b« gotgl white he engag.a JA th« unpIvnMnt but neeaggary job of etmftlng a few million« «ut cf th« Byg- tesi tur 6 i» own um . Pa thnmerman, of Olnclnnatl, la Mid to ba buey Battling th« deb» of bi« erm- l«-l«v, th« Duke of Munchgater. Th« dnt«’« cradltora will doubtlaw 1» glad that pa h«« decided not to hoard hie uwney uiup The Wawhlngton Poet has dlerover«d M number of CongnOMnan In Washing ton «Itk «Dewha« In th«lr poteet* In- tha quarter deck; asBux’h o» th«M 1« no law again«» car rying «nncMted a ¡»ver ha» it (kwan’t "Something heard I like th« Wruffigg ef a ehsttersti wr«ck." seem that there * anything that o*n ha A oom A public «-tool principal d«*1«r«8 that “<tikr«go boy« «nd girl« twist their parent« around th «Ir finger«. One «f tlma’w change* A generation «go 1« w«w th« hoya ata! girl« wh« wer« twisted, «nd not around the Angora, but over th« parental An«* Einar then, the arrow taking fHwB the lonsen«« wring Answered. “That we« Norway tweaking from thy hand, O King." Yet Oscar of Sw«d«n had not the mortification of Otef of Norway, that misfortune bad com« to Alm fwun go ing ton fast and far and getting «heed of hi« tim«s, and be had th« aerwDllng knowledge that through im fault of hte wer« tte lands over wklek his I'wmler •tolypla haa given the Dgm anepter extended and th« dominions of to «iMteretand that th« Ctef’a will son bis bouse diminished. Two psopl«« had ttau«e te I« tli« only law In RiMBg got at cross purpose«, and It was not Pvrhsi« th« CM« cr«et«d th« Duma Ctwroly horaiga he though* U Would ba In ths yow«r of « constitutional king to lead s<ethar those who bad te be an assy way to beep It« maniliwnt frota drlvwi tf they were not to separata wtlrriAg up tnauhie eiaewU««, *• Ws m «» tiiat the America« press generally refem to IzHBlo Caectyvnyi a« ‘Uta Vanderbilt count.” Thia 1« «ot tn*«nt •• any a|gn of fll«re«i»et to 8 noble Austrian houte, but merely lllu* trataa the fact that the democracy is airing « propar consciousness of Its own aristocratic values Miagnirl boast« • nsw society, "The Vnltsd Veteran« of the Civil War,” m>«d« up of Union and Confederate sol diers Missouri was on the border land bstween North and South, and "brother against brother” was more ♦h«n a figure of speech. The Missouri society may tend to a united grand •riuy of blue «nd gray. Tli« Finnish Diet I mi I pawed unani- anousiy • bill providing that no alco- •ol shall hereafter be manufaceured In Finland or imported into the coun try. In Russia, of which Finland 1« a part, th« manufacture of nlcohol 1« a 8t«tg monopoly. The Finn« evidently Object to many thing« from Russia be- «Ideg th« government of the Gear. •JI«« I thy gam««, heiilthy ft»»!« and bed thy homte" would lie enjoyed by «Very youth. If the blrtlulay wish of Field Mnrghal Ixvrd Rolwrta could come to ^*as& "Anfl keep young,” adds the f«n«>ug <v>mmander-ln-<*hi«f of the Brit ish army. “I hnvg kept mygelf young o& purpt«« I n«ver drink and I don't amok«, «nil I «m r««lly not a day Older than 1« 1M0.” At that rate "Bolte. ’ who W6B Item in 1832. Ig ¿8 instead «f 78, Ind th« boy« be gpt*aks ot si* generougly n«ed not hwttats to wiah him m««y mor« happy rsturng Of tli« many Wonderful things In the Wlfl, tew. If any, are more wonderful tha« th« manifestation« of the care Which i eJd taksa nf the helpteM There Wite a splendid Illustration of this care, •X«rcl»«rt through human lugtruments, fti th« will of the late Robert N. Car- ten, of Philadelphia. Mr. Carson be queathed an eMate worth $5,000,000 for th« puriswe of founding and maintain ing a college for orphan girls between Chfl of 5 and 10 year» who have •either tether nor mother. They are to rOcetve such training as will fit them a life of usefulness, and are then to b« discharged at the age of 18 or lost The girls are not w> l>e dressed in unlRwiu. but nre to be allowed the ♦»•ret» of some degree of Individual O TO CURB GAMBLING IW7-' OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS ®Eff BESEW® FROM TUB C1RTAIN troop ci cavalry had about twenty desertions in one year. The writer took i>ains—knowing the nifin personally— to loquire a* to the reason of the deser tions. Most of the men left because they hated and despised the first sergeant, claiming that they did not Stun« into the service to iis ruled over by any man Who wa« not, and tetver could be, their Superior in intellect «nd education. At tho commencement ©f the Spanish-American war, When the army « *» increased to war etreugth, Intelli gent non-commlAslon«rl officer« received promotion« to various vacancies with greater pay. What wa* the re gtilt? Th« old Soldiers who could hardly write their •wn name« wer» promoted to the vacancies caused by th« Increase. In • great many cases where good sense and intelligent discipline one« ruled, arrogance, ignorance •nd pr«ten«e uow hold full sway. Organization com- •nandtr« depend on the old soldier first «ergeaute. and the« latter take advantage of that trust, with the idea that it «aa their general superiority which caused their promotion. What was and always will be the result? Desertion» What does the new recruit expect front those in authority when h« joins his troop or company? >l«.»Mpf»tg to find that those in authority are th« most intelligent What is tire* must natural result when he finds Ignorance and pretense where h« should find In telligence? II« Is disappojnted. No man can respect ig Borane«. Ignorant authority 9 desplard «nd gradually hated, and hated to such an extent that men under such authority will commit themselves in, a «bort tirii« and get into ««rtoug trouble, ending with deaartion.—L»«lie’e ° Legal Information « *<»••■« Twfce tk»t ««.I«,» «8» Negro *<>««•* twt, **ir« wi««.n The constitutional guaranty of im munity from criminal prosecution, ex- Ths pawnshop of Morris Eelngolfl, at f cept by indictment, is held, in State fit)« Kansas avenue. West Bids, was In 1 vs. Lewis (N. C.), 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) tii« care of Mrs. Felngold nawntly, 0G9, not to prevent the legislature from Say» the Kansag City Tlmss. Ch« was 1 permitting the grand jury of one coun in the storeroom, whsre th« Sate Is. ty to indict for crimes committed in when a customer called liar to another an adjoining county, since, although room. This left the mfs without • Indictment requires a grand jury, venue guardian. But Mr« F«!ngold Was alert. Is not an essential element of it. She beard a noise In the storeroom and A municipal corporation maintaining went In quickly. Tli« door of the safe •n electric light plant, which, for com • as open and she remembered It bad pensation, Installs in a business place been closed. And there, crouching In a light which is imperfectly fitsulated. front of It, she saw a negro. Is held, in Thomas vs. Somerset (Ky.), The pawnbroker’s wife didn’t screen. 7 I*. It. A. (N. S.) 9i»3, to be liable to a«d she didn't faint She is S Stuall An employe of the consumer for in woman, but she grabbed th« negro by juries caused by his coming in contact the coat and put her hands In his with an electric current when, to warm pockets. There she found $18P In bills bis hand, he puts it to the globe. and checks which had be«n In the «ate. A statute Iteilting the time for pres Then she dropped the money Into her entation of State bonds which have apron. • ‘‘Don’t you take that $11.10," fh« Tte been overdm* for a period of eighteen gro told her. "That’s mine. I’ll hav« months, to six month« from the time you arrested If you take it Please, of notice; and which provides for pub mfacus, give me back my $3.10. ¥<wi lication of notice In a newspaper pub wouldn't take a man's last cent, would lished at the capital city of the State, and for filing of cople« with the secre- you?” tarieg of variou« boards of trade. Is But Mrs. Felngold was pitiless, ‘‘I was «frald he'd tak« «ll th« held. In Tipton v«. Smythe (Ark.), 7 money from me If he got a chance.” L. R. A. (N. S.) 714. not to l>e unreW she said afterward, "; ’so I turned and •onahle, and therefere not to impair threw It In the wife and locked the the constitutional right« of • txmdhold- door. When I turned •round h« we» er, although, by reason of absence from the country, he actually receives no ao gone. "I thought only of t b« monty i ties of the statute until after the os dldu't even think of calling for help, plration of the limitation period. “A. rented a farm of B. for two tiwmgh there wer« three men In the next room. The negro was Wrgfl. He years. At the time of renting nearly was a lot more scare«! than I wa«. all the land upon the farm was plow*!. No, he didn't try to strike me, but kopi R «old the farm before the term «f repeating, ‘I ain’t got nothing; I ain't the Hase expired. A. releaaed bls in got nothing.' But I held on to hto coat terests under Ills tease at the time the with my left hand mud ■earcbad big place was sold, but told B. that he pockets with the other. And I found would uot plow the land ba<» Can I A. or the purcbagrr of the farm now the $180 In money «nd cbe<*g Mr. Fglngold e»amlned bis b'iok« force B. to plow the land back?” Ans. last night to learn if the negro tray •—No. Unless there Ig a definite agree ment in a lease to plow back ]nnd truthful about the $3.10. "I don’t know exactly how much which Is plowed at the time of enter money we had," the pawnbroker Mid, ing into the lease, or Unless It can be “but I don't believe we have any of shown that It is n general custom to that negro's cash. Of course he can plow l»ek Ouch land, a tenant will not be compelled to plow It back. If par come back and help utv Investigate ties do not provide for this in their he wants to. "Besides the $180 In money anfi agreemegt and If there is no gengral checks there were diamond« W«rth ffJVf custom throughout the country to do and Jewelry worth $300 In tffe afif».” I »>, the law does not presume that the TAe police hav«u’t found the n«g»>. fc*n«nt agrees to replow the land. ta «IQIM OH THAW WÇWJ.D BorroWI njg :* ° o V ct— O 0 Till AJAERICA.V 9AJLXKB. o • HE American farmer is emperor of the tu»l- versa. Tlier« is no doubt altout it, for Sscrttary Wilson tells us go, and he backs up hia assertion with figures that simply appall with their immensity. Weakly. • - The «ecretary estimates th« total value THE XODQB HU.vBAJHD. of the Anterican farmers’ product for 1!M>7 KCK there was a man, and he was a lodge at 17,412,000,000, mor« than 10 per cent higher than th« man. He belonged to a dozen different valuation of the 1Ô0G crop» in l'JtK). And 11MMJ wag a fraternal orders, and- he wag interested in rword-brenkiug year. The troubles of the bank«* and the fear of a finaoeial •very on« of them. He wag «ecretary of on», treasurer of another, Eastern Po Stringent- dis.1pj»ar in contemplation of these figures. tentate lu « third, Keeper of the Sacred What mw<l to worry whan ttg« tillers of the anil are per Coal Scuttle in a fourth, and so on through forming such wonders? During the last nine year«, say» the secretary, th« <he entire list. Now, the» manifold duties kept him out American farmer ha« added (53,UU),0U),UU) to the wealth although, In itself, there ’ s no partícula» harm ■l«h_t*— of the nation. . la that. It’« only a question of what a man doeg when Of course corn I« bli<, with « valuation of <1,350,- ha’« out. «nd whether there lBn’t worn« better reason for (Ito,(W, «nd, lest wa may not comprehend this vast total, him to stay at home. Mr. Wilson kindly volunteer« the information that thir A« It happened, this nten wag married. IF* lov«d hi« wlf*. tan. Sometime« h« said he thought he’d have to teen «uch cr<>[*s would replac« tli« banking power of the give up a f«w of hie ladg«A they kept hi* out k> much., United States, it« capital, ourpltM, deposits and circula But he tool it oat in thinking. He didn’t do It Now, tion, «nd that «eventeen such crop« would be equal to •11 the money in th« World. th* littl* woman at horn«, sh« began to d« «mu« thlnlt- And Uncle- Ram appréciât«« the effort* of thotw who - Ing hew»lf, end et laet •!>• formulated a pla«. One morning h« epted a que«r kind *f pin oe her make t«o Made« of gra«g grow wfiere only one grew be waist. "Whit's that?" asked th« man. ‘Tlite?” •lie fore. Tlnxnigh the Department <ff Agriculture h« is •aid; "oil, till« 1« the badge of the Daughter« <# the lendiog co-opgrafion and encouragement to th« farmer, Munn. I Joined laot -night while you were «t the baa- ertu<*atiig him to employ «-tentlfie method« In th« treat ment of the «oil and Intelligent*« in the rotation of crop* gu«t of the Ioe Aw«l«re’ Society.” Then, for thr»* «olid monthw he Watched th« appalling Re«ult9 «how that it I» worth ills Whll«—Toledo Blade. "Ever «fee« his wife 1» ( Mlf) , suit for divorce be hits ldt>k<A tberlkiy VO » ®o Vtgrkr 0->UO*>-(&,Bo. •irar It, King of Sweden, who tiled worried." • | <«),’ Dec. fb—Any one who lives tacitly fffter a rfilgu both iottc and “I^e oughtn't to wotey,; dtift’R pf*6r r in a aenfill tow* or upon a farm should y>rosj>ero^A- -except for one Incident— Jdy jg*t It”—Houston 4’ost • te very careful «bout the chajgcter amid thg sincere mourning of Wls of the* cfcalk maflis which aUiay be pie and the esteem of good men of all What hat an added redf>e^t a ffttl* WÇ" fentyj 0» the Alices. nations, was one of the most 0votn- ha« 1 for nls sister’s knowfelge when Ilf affinor cases It Is s good thlÿj to pllshed gentlemen and best tuen of his he *e-*a iler mixing liG) favorita KluSÌ MS fjiem gtand; in otiqyra^th« otlMra^the w [»eat tlma. By «very standard of public d«- of cak« O o O ©O O o o thing «<> on. Th« «xwrait olfennttntlon she jiflned was th« Loyal Vertiefia Then came the Prophetesses, ftiiioWed clos«ly by »lie KaWniis. After this she selected tli« Paughlrrs of I.llwrty und the Woman's Reform As- giciation. TUo llttl« wom«n w«s g-ldoin in now. S<wn*- tiino« lie would g< li<«n« fo« «up|»r and find a note on the table, “Gone h> lodge Cold ham In the pantry.” Finally, in o «Ingle tseoa she Ateled to her I Mt of mem- hgrshlps, by taking oa the Knights and ixidies of the Gr««n Harp, the Ladite Auxiliary Brigade and the Daughters of Re«f. That *es the Uist Straw Sunday morning the man Stood over the’bed and l*K>ked at a sleepy-ey«d little woman. Here — — •• ” he said, "i’ll quit if you will. 1« it a bargain t” khe put tier grms right up, and grabbed him «lid hissed him. “ It ia! It is!” she cried. “And we'll have hum« again! I «on't thinh this is any preachment against frater- nal order». It isn’t, They Hre too useful. They help too much. Too many of them are real Influences for good in this busy old world of oura. But a man can bO too mtich of a lo< i«e man, can’t he, whan be lets bis lutlges interfere with a finer thing and a holier thing and a th.ng which inuAt mean more to him than all the lodges that •ver were? Because, be It ever so lodge- le*. thtee'8 im > place like home.—Chicago Examiner. ° o° o course 1« to gw them olt ju*t as »«am »• pimibl«. It 1« wltk the chalk m«r> *><« th» tenc« th«t the trnmp p:i®sws th« word along to hjs fellows regarding th« character of th« pvopl« who Jiv» In « house and th« tr«atm«ftt which may I* ekpvctvd. Now, if you re*e a clrcl« with a cross Inside of It, erase that mfirk as soon us you can. It means thgt «ome time you or some one within the Rouse gave a meal to a trawp and I m * I s passing the word along that “food Is given here.” That sign is an invitation that no tramp wil! overlook. The best thing ybu can fio Is to rub that syuibdl out and draw another cir cle with an arrow running out of it. That sign means "Gtet u«a.v as quickly as poOBibte-” You may also draw n bog and Inalile of this chalk two “N’s1 which run to gether. This Is the high Sig» that there is a dog in the garden. Or, if you want to be put entirely beyond the pale of annoyance and mo lestation, Just draw a heavy line, which look« like a snake with an upraised head and three curve« Tn its back, That will mean to the tramp who* eye looks upon it, “Poor peopl« in this house.” Or, you can «Imply make ■ cipher mark. That means "Nothing doing.” That these signs are accurate IS vouched for by Inspector GvorgePatter- sou, of the bureau of criminal InSper- tlon of the Boston police department, He has mad* a «)>ecial study of than® sign«. ta'ffi Cromer luis placed In the hands of a London publlsiier for publication early In I'.HiR the manug rlpe of a ixnte of mod«rn Egypt Mt*. Humphrey Ward'« Juvsnlle story, “Mllly and Oily,” in reissued by Doubleday, Page A Co. It wa» pub lished oMgfnaly in 1881. HcrnrSiin Sudermann’s fiftieth birth day wn« recently celebrated by the printing of the hundredth edition of “Frau Sorge." This novel first ap- pegged in 1»87. Prof. Richard Holbrook. of Bryu Mnwr Colle**, has discovered In Italy two unedited letters of Byron, one of them c<M>tninli* a mention of Allegra. He intends to publish them soCli. Clevemos Is usualy heretVal, but Mr. G. If. Chesterton lifts always used his clevernesg to*iog e»*ellence th • orthodox wajg <♦ thinking Hence fre quent panHtyflcf on hunH1ff>. As an cx^jiifr of ImmfilTty®w’e *■«$! the ltg|n that ai^ad^pgaFwas rekntly dihvered O °o* O • r the New Reform Club in Ixmdon on "Wli*t I Want the Gov«rnm«nt to Do," ,bj- tt. <$. Cheaterton. MAY COVER DEALS IÖ STOCK. Ida« Threatens to Place an Embargr ou Market Speculation of All Kinds. * a«blngton correvpondene*! HERE has heci a sudden awaken Ing tiirougiusi the country to th« fact that Borne thing is going ot I n WaXhlngtoi which threaten gambling in cot ton and grain and possibly, too which alma t< place an embarg« on speculation It stocks. I nd lea tlons of thli awakening api*a; in a regular Hoot I of letters from the Interests threaten*« i to the members of Congress, who nr« Identified with the proposed restrlctlv» legislation. The reason which call« forth thes« letters lies In two bills introduced by Senator Culberson, of Texas, and Rep I resentative Burleson, of the sain« State, designed to wipe out sjax-ulatlor in cotton futures. The bills nre ldentt cal and while they apply only to cot ton, ns originally drawn, there Is tike lihood that If either of them Is report ed out of ti>e committee to which they have been referred the provisions wil be extended to apply to wheat nnd oth er grains. The central Idea In the Burleson bll Is the application of the power to reg ulgte Interstate commerce so ns to re strain telegraph and telephone comp» nles from trans mitting messages relating to a con tract for the fu ture delivery of cotton. The use of tile mails nlso |g prohibited to pub lications contain ing notices or rec ords of the trans actions of any pro fl u c « exchange wherein the cog c. A. CI IJIKHSU.’V tracts atinad at in th« mea sur» «re made, Heavy penalties provide the means of restraining the telegraph and. telephone companies. It Is the conten tion of Representative Burleson that If Information of the kind prescribed cat« be kept away from the people living outside New York and New Orleans it will put the New York Cotton Ex change out of business. Frankly, It is admitted, that such is the object of the Mil. The B< >ards of Trade In several cities are aroused. Probably what they chiefly fear is that* public senti- nient against spec ulatlon In both stocks and bonds, which has ti»*en accentuated by the r e cent financial* condition, m a yr hasten a demand for the passage of the bill. In addition to* Th« major dram»« of Richard Brin* l«y Sheridan, ”Ph« Rivals," "The School for Scandal" «nd “The Critic,' »i have been issued tog ether as • volume of the Athenieum Press Series for th« u«* of loth students i and general read- era. "Between the Dark and the Day- light" Is a collection * of short stories by William Dean Howells, dealing, more or less, with those curious mental experiences, those fantastic metaphys ical phenomena which have embroid ered life for some and furnished the rest of us with an endless source ot after-diimer speculation. These stories of Howells are leisurely worked out and politely, too, with no particular strain ui>on the credulity. The opening narrative, "A Sleep and a Forgetting,' Is a skillfully handled story of a girl who, in :< moment of deep tragedy, has lost her memory; uot only her recol lection of the past, mercifully blotted out, but the actual faculty of remem bering, that she forgets her father and her acquaintances the Instant they the Burleson are out of her sight. A physician drifts I w- f- hbpbu « w . ineosure, Repre- into the case and the story Is worked sen ta five Hepburn, of Iowa, has in out to, presumably, the correct pmtho hand a plan to regulate dealing In logical as »ell as spiritual ending with stocks. the doctor, the girl, her father and a j ’Both France nnd ’’Gejrmany bare tteld adventur« on the Italliui coast as' adopted radical restrictive • measures the factors. probably most readers relating to dealings In stocks, grain, will regard “Editba” as the best, as it cotton and other things on margins, is the moat subtle, story In the colle«'- I and their example Is being pointed to tlon. A shallow, romantic girl, caught by American legislators who are ear up io a wave of war-time hysteria, nest in their intention of doing some overt ales her lover’s scruples and sends thing along the same line. The laws him to the front with spiritual result« of ... . France ____ , prohibit ........ gambling ,,, in several not ordinarily charged up against War. securities and provide heavy fines and In R m ' Oil of ills ffubject* lias the au Imprisonment for infractions thereof, tbo» Veen »• happy as In these two. I The French penal code also prohibit» “Th« Chick of the Easter Egg” Is so i ‘‘comers’’ or attempts to control tb» trivial in matt**? that not even the mas supply or affect the prices of grain,, ter’s m«nn«r can redeem It. The oth- flour, bread awl other food products. •ra, however, are good examples of SHORT NEWS NOTES. Mowglis ghortrr gtarfeg. St. Chrietopfcer la the patron saint of motoring. IF»««»' Bred. Brazil has no miffclle class There ar« "Did your wife finally consent to you« taking that sticky tty paper out of tb« but two classes there—the rich and th« poor. dialog fijom?” Countess of Warwick, on return to “Of course she did." London, says America'« only nope is u> “How «¡id you get her consent?” socialism. “Oh. just by sticking to It"-*—Hous Three daughters and one son of Batn- tab Post. uel W. Carpenter of Allegheny, Pa., hava •loped In a year. SyrnCMng nt Voters. The- grand jury at Oakland, (%!., re The Foreigner—Vaccination Is one m fused to vhle an indictment against Har the qualifications for a voter in Nor. ry Kleinschmidt, accused of murdering way. his friend, Frank Bellows, and the youg* The American—We are opposed to a man was released. marked vote or a marked voter over The establishment of the William Budd her«.—Yonkers Statesman. Furniture Company, in Petersburg, Va.^ was burned the other day. I xjss 975,000, • He Side-Step«. partially covered by insurance. Husband—<es, dear, of course we For the first time in the history of must eoono*lze. New York county a man has been con Wife- Well, then. I’ve concluded that victed for attempted murder. He is Pie- tor Giannone. a photographer. He was I wight the cooking myself. ¿lusbnnd hastily)—Oh. no, It's charged with hiring Bruno Cardea to kill cheaper to keep a servant in9he 'CtJlise Lw gi Favata, that be might wed Favata’ao wife. Favata was wounded, but recov than • doctor.—Philadelphia Pre««. ered. O SS o Measures Introduced by Texaj Members Would Prevent Op tions in Cotton and Grain. o o > 030 o ©<r <b © 4