Wallowa chieftain. (Joseph, Union County, Or.) 1884-1909, September 04, 1902, Image 6

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    WALLOWA CHIEFTAIN.
riibllhtl Every AVrek.
ENTERPRISE OREGON.
Perityphlitis appends to be the thirty-second
degree of appendicitis.
Presently Illinois will advertise for
bids for a puncture-proof anti-trust
law.
The trouble with most of the In
ventors of nir ships is that they leave
needy families behind them.
People who try to be elegant by call
ing them "knee trousers" might as well
save energy by referring to them as
"pants."
That Massachusetts lady who mur
dered thirty-one people Isn't likely to
be used as an evidence of woman's re
fining influence upon man.
The scientists are all mixed up over
the causes for the I'clee eruption. But
as long as they can't prevent an erup
tion what's the use of worrying over
the class it belongs in?
A Chicago judge thinks $15 a week
isn't enough for a man who has a wife
aud two children to support. It is like
ly, however, that Hetty Green and Bus
eell Sage would regard that as suffi
cient to provide riotous luxury.
One difference between a home and
en institution that is, most institu
tions was indirectly brought out at a
recent meeting of the ministerial league
In a New England city. The league was
addressed by the president of a wom
an's union which has founded a home
for working girls. That wise woman
told the assembled ministers that one
room In the new house is set apart for
"sessions of courting," where the girl.-i
are permitted to receive calls from men
friends. She reported that the "court
ing room" is often engaged for weeks
ahead. The ministers laughed, but they
also applauded this triumph of human
nature over old-fashioned institution
rule and routine,
A recent novel represents a sweet
and gracious girl as concealing the ex
istence of a will, in order that she may
herself inherit an estate, and thus pro
vide for a sick and dependent mother.
The author expects us to agree that
the girl Is a good girl, and that the gen
erous impulse justifies itself in spile of
the crime. It is a testimony to the
healthy change of public sentiment in
the last hundred years that reviewers
and readers refuse to accept the au
thor's dictum in the matter. When a
man does that sort of thing, we call
him a scoundrel. Why not a woman?
The defaulting bank cashier, who gave
the proceeds of his first theft to the
support of foreign missons. went, and
deserved to go, to State prison, in spite
of his religious impulse. Education is
doing a notable work for women In in
ducing them to assume certain burdens
which hitherto many of them have uot
deemed obligatory. That which men
call business honor Is one of these bur
dens. It is a responsible possession. It
requires eternal vigilance. But it is
worth having and keeping, for women
as for men.
There, is a hopeful movement among
American churches for concerted ac
tion regarding divorce and remarriage.
The Episcopal Church took the lead,
and invited the Presbyterians to act
with it. The Presbyterian General As
eeiubly, at its meeting In New York,
appointed a committee to confer ami
co-operate with the Episcopal commit
tee, and with such committees as
might be appointed by other churches.
The special end in view is so to affect
public opinion as to secure more strict
divorce laws, and, if possible, uniform
laws in the various States. Were the
churches of this country to act togeth
er with real earnestness to accomplish
this reform, they would probably suc
ceed. The sacredness of marriage and
the preservation of the family are re
ligious and moral, as well as social,
questions. Success would probably fol
low a united demand for better laws
from the moral aud religious forces of
the community. It must be remem
bered, too, that the scandal of easy di
vorces and swift remarriages is not
wholly a matter of legislation. The
churches and the clergy are not free
from blame. Divorce for trivial causes
or through collusion ought to carry
with it a social and moral stigma. Par
ties to such divorces should be unable
to find a reputable clergyman to re
marry them, yet often they have expe
rienced little ditlicnlty. In order to
produce the effect which is desired
upon public opinion and upon legisla
tion, the churches must themselves
maintain a high standard.
for her. She would rather rend her
brother's books than her own. Stories
of daring, fighting and adventure are
more interesting to her than tales of
meek and self-sacrificing misses who
act sedately and die young. The Amer
ican girl has as much red blood In her
veins as the American boy. There Is
no such marked difference in the
tastes of boys and girls as the makers
of distinctively feminine stories were
wont to suppose. They both like life
and action In their books. Just as their
elders do. and there is no reason why
the girls, should not have it as much as
the boys. For wholesome and inter
esting books like Miss Alcott's there
will always be a demand, but girls'
books as a separate class seem nbout
to become extinct. Nor is this a mat
ter for regret. The present demand
of the publishers for juvenile books
written for both boys and girls afford
at least one instance in which com
mercial motives are in accord with
what is normal and wholesome.
The Ht. Hon. J. Bryce. member of
Parliament, delivered a lecture at Ox
ford recently upon "The Relations of
the Advanced and Backward Races of
Mankind," which Is provoking mnch
interesting discussion In the English
press. He described the various re
sults of the contact of two races dif
fering in strength. Either the weaker
race died out or was absorbed Into
the stronger, or the two liecame com
mingled into something different from
what either was before, or, finally, the
two continued to dwell together un
mixed, each preserving Its own char
acteristics. By the two processes ol
absorption and extinction alone more
than half the tribes or peoples that
existed when authentic history began
have disappeared, and Mr. Bryce is of
opinion that within two centuries
there might be less than forty lan
guages left and less than twenty na
tionalitiesthat is, branches of man
kind of the same stock. As to the fu
ture of mankind, he doubted whether
any further mixture of advanced ami
backward races is to be desired. Mr.
Bryce dwelt with special emphasis
upon the relations of the two races
where institutions are democratic, as
Jn tjie United States, and as may yet
be the case in South Africa and the
Philippines. Evidently referring to
this country, he says: "As regards
political rights race and blood should
not be made the ground of discrimin
ation. Where the bulk of the color
race Is unfit for political power a qual
ification based on property and educa
tion might be established, which would
permit the upper section of the race
to enjoy the suffrage." As regards
social relations, Mr. Bryce goes to the
root of the question when he says:
"Law can do but little save in the
way of expressing the view the state
takes of how Its members should be
have to one another. Good feeling and
good maimers cannot be imposed by
statute. Tis true, and pity 'tis 'tis
true," but the truth of it Is Illustrated
almost every day in this country. Mr.
Bryce Is greatly puzzled when he re
members how successful Mohammed
anism has been in overcoming all color
difficulties and creating the sentiment
of equality among its followers, while
Christianity has been unsuccessful.
Perhaps this Is because Christianity
Inculcates charity towards all and re
ligious equality, while it does not con
cern Itself with social and political
equality. If it did, all ranks would he
leveled a process for which the world
is not yet ready. The questions grow
ing out of the contact of the backward
and advanced races in this country
must be left to time to settle, and this
is evidently Mr. Bryce's opinion, as
he says in the close of his lecture:
"When we think of the problems which
are now being raised by the contact
of races, clouds seem to hang heavy
on the horizon of the future, yet light
streims in when we remember that
the spirit in which civilized states are
preparing to meet those problems is
higher and purer than It was when,
four centuries ago, the great outward
movement of the European peoples be
gan." The process of solution must
be slow, but It will be hastened when
the backward race shows such signs
of coining forward that it will be for
the Interests of the advanced race to
aid its upward movement.
K Emth ails P
OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS.
Changes of a Lifetime.
It took the ltoinau republic some ages
to pass from the simple poverty of its
early days upon the seven hills to the
age of Augustus, but the American re
public bus made that change iu one gen
eration. Iu the second decade of the nineteenth
century the lives of the American people
were severely simple and pluiu. Most of
the necessaries of life were raised on the
farm by the people living on it. Most of
their trading was done by barter. The
country people scarcely ever got in the
course of a year more than enough money
to pay their tuxes. The farmers' houses
were almost destitute of furniture. Ex
cept a few school books and the family
Bible, there was, no reading matter, ex
cept ill favored neighborhoods where two
or three families took a weekly newspa
per together. Muils were infrequent uiid
postage was almost prohibitory. The era
of invention had not begun. Th - only
means of cooking was the open fere aud
the brick oven. Meat was rousted by
suspending from a cord attached to a
hook in the ceiling. It was with great
ditlicnlty that tires were started or kept
going. Tools and food and the labor of
men and animals were freely borrowed
anil lent. Farming tools were rude and
deficient. The poverty of farms in re
spect to tools made it impossible for fann
ers to prosper except by cattle raising
nud the cultivation of the small grains.
Heating stoves or furnaces were un
known. Communication between dis
tant parts of the country was practically
non-existent and transportation was of
the crudest sort. Men were narrow and
bigoted. Civilization was stationary.
There was a prejudice against innova
tion and change, a belief that all wisdom
was in the fathers.
Contrast this simple, narrow life with
the complex and broad life of the poorest
farmer of our times. Think of the tools
and horses, the machinery and the im
proved methods he has. Think of the
comforts and luxuries that are his. Think
how farming has been .changed from
slavery to 'inspiring work. Then con
trast the picture of the past with the
general wealth, progress in education, dif
fusion of knowledge, opportunities and
hopefulness of our own times. Only the
beginnings of the great power of the
people are so f. r seen. As a matter of
fact the tremendous changes wrought by
Improvement of communication und
transportation have made it possible for
great free governments to exist perma
nently. It is now and ever will be the fashion
to talk of the good old times, but in
America the old times are not to be com
pared with ours. Our wealth has not
spoiled the nation, though it has ruined
some classes. At the core the nation is
sounder now than formerly because it is
wiser and better trained and equipped.
Minneapolis Journal.
Feminina Overwork.
Now and then one hears the comment
that women never know when to stop and
take a rest, but persist in going on and on
until they are exhausted. The explana
tion, when one comes to think of it. is a
simple one. Women have for innum
erable generations been engaged in work
which does not admit of vacations, while
man's work does. Hence a public opin
ion has grown up iu the one case which
does not exist iu the other.
The type of woman who is liable to
overwork Is conscientious. If site goes
away for an absolute rest of a mouth
or three months, or a year, she hears a
chorus of voices denouncing her as idle,
incompetent or neglectful of duty. This
is especially the case if she be the mother
of a family. She never gets away from
the care of that family, and she is al
ways conscious of the fact that if any
thing happens in her absence she will be
condemned by a jury of her peers for
having been away when it occurred. This
sort of thing takes all the rest out of a
vacation, and few people have the nerve
to disregard it.
This morbid conscientiousness, how
ever, is not a tiling to encourage. The
thing which every human being should do
is to make sure, first, that he or she has
a fair amount of the work of the world
to do, and second, to stop when thut share
is done. If a rest is necessary.
Of course, most people who are worth
anything iu life do more than their share
of work, but they should uot break them
selves down in the process. Every sensi
ble person should find out how far It is
possible to go. with safety to health and
usefulness, and stop there unless life and
death are involved. In that way
more will be accomplished for one's self
und for others than by continual over
work out of some notion of pride or duty
which is not real conscientiousness at
all. New York News.
The Press and Crime.
Much has been said and written upon
the idea that the press, by the publication
of the details of crime iiwit..u t.. .u,.
commission of other crimes. Because the
iieiuus or a suicide or a murder are some
times copied by other suicides or mur
derers there are those who generalize
from that fact that a curb should be put
upon the press to restrain them from giv
ing the sensational incideuts of such tra
gedies. People who argue In that fashion to
such conclusions understand human na
ture imperfectly. They who know most
of the psychology of the human animal
understand that there is no riiriil !, r.t
imitativeness that will explain incidental
replications of example. The futility of
appealing to anv such la
ed in the cases of Cain and Abel. The
law does not exist, else both those boys
would have been righteous instead of but
the one, and to-day we would be rejoiced
by seeing only good boys and good girls
in the families of which the parents are
models of morality.
Humanity is born croked twisted into
a livimr interroirntion noint It w,it,t-
to know all about things as soon as il
hmis out tnat there are things. It instinc
tively wants to put this and that together
and get at the ends of things and Miat
is why the baby tries to put his toes in
his mouth! That same inborn curiosity
follows the human creature always and
accounts for the enormous growth of
newspapers and gives invincible support
to the doctrine of the freedom of the
press.
One of the greatest laments of a read
ing civilization is that the world's his
tory begun before the printing press was
invented and the reporter who interviews
got on the scene. How really satisfying
it would be even now to read the details
of the meeting between Satan aud Eve,
a stenographic report of their conversa
tion and graphic interviews with Adam
after he got tired from the Garden of
Eden and with Noah after he ran
aground on Ararat'
Newspaper makers know human na
ture better than amateur moralists. They
do not find that news reports of crimes
breed crimes any more than news reports
of sermons breed conversions, or news
reports of gifts to charity set everybody
or many bodies crazy to make large dona
tions and get their names printed. The
leal newspaper gives the news the sto
ries of the daily life of the world-the
good, the evil, the wise and the silly, be
cause the public want to know it all and
will be satisfied with nothing less. Ihe
newspaper is printed for the ninety-aud-nine
that ore wide awake, and not for
the one who yearns for the millennia
age'. Atlanta Constitution.
Playing with Moral Fire.
In various parts of the country there
has been au extraordinary number of
tragedies of late arising out of the adven
tures of unmarried women with married
men. Morbid literature, chiefly of for
eign birth or extraction, has been pro
moting in this country the myth of pla
tonic affection between men and women,
married and single. Almost invariably
the prismatic illusion is actualized in a
somber ending, if crime does not smirch
both the parties or annihilate either the
reputation of both suffer, and it is the
unwritten law that the woman in such a
case suffers beyond repair, while the guil
ty man escapes or endures with compla
cency the stigma which cannot be ef
faced from tile future of his companion.
There is no prudence in mincing words
about these escapades. A married man
or woman who seeks intimate and con
stant companionship outside the family
circle to which he or she belongs is eith
er a libertine or a fool.
No plea of extenuation can be set up
for the moral laches of a married man or
married woinuu. They know perfectly
well that they are playing with (ire or
playing the trapper of inexperience. No
family of intelligence or self-respeet will
tolerate social attentions from a married
man to an unmarried woman when those
attentions transcend the bounds of abso
lute decorum. Yet mothers who are am
bitious or avaricious will let their inno
cent daughters play with this moral tire
with whose Uame nine times in ten they
are bound to be burnt.
Many a blackened home is a grim
monument to the satanic character of the
myth of platonie love between married
men and unmarried women and no less
often between married women and un
married men. Chicago Chronicle.
'PEARL OF MADRID.
MJIE, rATE.NOTHE.
WALKING ON THE DANUBE.
One of the marked tendencies of the
times in juvenile literature is the de
crease in books written distinctively
for girls. Of books for the young there
is a riever-increiising number, but the
expansion Is confined solely to boys'
books or to volumes meant for both
boys and girls. Stories of the "Robin
son Crusoe" type are multiplying from
year to year, while those of the "Little
Women" type are becoming almost ex
tinct. There are at least live books
for boys to one for girls in every new
season's list. Yet girls probably do
more reading than boys. Why this
ungaUant discrimination? The pub
lishers explain It by-saying that they
have better success with books meant
for both sexes, that books for boys
come next In demand, and that vol
umes labeled an girls' literature are not
pood sellers. The truth Is that the
American girl spurns the tame and
Bamby-pamby stories usually written
The intrepid Austrian "water mar
vel." Captain Grossman, recently com
pleted a walk on the treacherous Dan
ube from Vienna to Linz, a distance of
nearly 1(H) miles. He towed his wife In
a small boat and accomplished the feat
without a mishap. His boots for water
pedestrianism are five feet long and
are his own Invention.
Ktlible Petroleum Oil.
Cottonseed oil, corn oil and linseed
oil, there is good reason to believe, will
probably have a rival at a not distant
day in edible petroleum oil. As a mat
ter of fact, petroleum has been success
fully desulphurized and deniliieriillzed.
Certain other solids and ingredients
have been extracted from it aud the
production of a fairly good edible oil
has already resulted.
When a man sits in the shade nnd
wntches those at work In the sun, he
prefers being called "critic" to
"loafer."
Some men are known by the com
pany they are unable to get into.
This Endearing Title U Bestowed Upon
a Former American Girl.
The most popular among the foreign
ladies resident In Madrid Is a former
American girl. Mine. Patenotre, wife
.,,.,. ..,.. of the French Am
bassador to the
court of AlfoiiBo
XIII. During the
recent coronation
festivities iu the
Spanish capital
M m e. Patenotre
was praised and
Battered and court
ed as was no other
woman iu the king
dom. She is a fa
vorite of the Queen
Regent, for whom she has a special
fondness, und on many occasions she
has had the King as her guest. She is
so popular among the elite of the king
dom that she has been called the Pearl
of Madrid.
Mme. I'atenotre's maiden name was
Eleanor Elverson. Her father was the
former publisher of the Philadelphia
Inquirer and one of the millionaires
of the Keystone State. She was edu
cated In Europe and on her return
home after a six-years' absence she
was pronounced the most fascinating
woman iu the Quaker City. Her facil
ity for acquiring languages was re
markable. She is proficient in German,
French and Russian, aud had been liv
ing In Madrid only six months before
she was able to speak the peculiar dia
lect of that province with the ease
and fluency of a native. In 1S114 sue
became the wife of Jules Patenotre,
then French Ambassador to Washing
ton. . In 1S!)7 he was transferred to
Vudrld.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S OFFICIAL
YACHT, THE MAYFLOWER.
AN EMERGENCY FIRE ENGINE.
A convenient emergency fire engine
is shown in the accompanying Illustra
tion, which. Engineering says, has sev
eral commendable features. It is man
ufactured by au English concern.
Prtjtllnt ItoiS(Vplt nflifink vnnl.f th f..n .
.nd more than , has beec on in' ? ""thllt
rivals the royal and imperial yachts of Eu, e,. princes and po"eu tates Not the
Hoheuzollern Itself can outdo the presidential vac-lit In ..i ais- 'ot tue
beauty of appointments, upholster? and decor, turn The tten "ur ""!
apartments, in the aft of the vessel, are a dream of nrin.-elv rts'Uel,t Personal
He has six state rooms for his w use and for Z " ' 1 ' "f
nigs, soft carpets, the most expensive of fancy wood, fine n osa s L,,r R"
chairs and lounging sofas, glittering art bedsteads and other In ,i' ll,X",r""'8
kind wait on the presidential pleasure w hen he . see, Ht t ,, t lT, """,ent8 ,hi"
ilarly with the culinary department. The k elTen and , " '' Sm"
serve on short notice a feast fit fur a king'. TheMavflo v L T7 f"n
property of Mrs. Ogden Goelet. It w T purchased bv Z ? """ th
time of the Spanish war and had been lying id e s ici then It '""T"? St tI,C
dent decided to have it fitted for his person use Th' ore I'r'T ,he Pre8i
. displacement of 2..HK. tons, U equipped w th twin 8Crew haS
power of 4.7J0. It is one of the fastest sieam yachts afioat ' WU
It consists of a three cylinder pump,
mounted on a truck and driven by a
petroleum motor. In case of an emer
gency, the pump Is ready at once, with
out loss of time in raising pressure with
a steam engine. Its efficiency Is assured
through the numerous tests which have
been made particularly against fires in
highly inflammable materials.
Cuba's Flag Is Old.
The flag of the Cuban republic ante
dates the establishment of the republic
Itself by a good many years. It dates
buck to about 1850. It has a Masonic
origin and hence the triamrle. Th.
red field Is the emblem of war. The
purpose of the movement here In thb
United States was to conquer the isl
nnd. Southern people, tiglitlng Ma
sons, were the leaders. The three
stripes represented the three depart
ments into which the Island was then
divided. The white stripes were put
in merely to divide the blue. The star
which nppeurs In the red field was the
lone star of Texas. In New Orleans
there existed the Association of the
Pii with money nll,i ln oU
when- he invaded Cubi l vr,i !
came together in 18). "sembly
popped by Caterpillar,.
A raihv.iy train was recentlv tn.
I near uiieims, KniIK. ,1V " " ' '
I of caternllbir- n.., . ... "'c '"uw
were thrown on them. '"k'1'8
Usually, we feel an oppression t.
cause of a lot of little thin . b"
neglected, but wh eh JSTi Ve
easily disposed of ' baVe been
opportunity to chew ,in . the
j io .uew all he could bit
REACHING TO PEKInT"
The New Mongolian R,..,
Trana-Bibcrian W
furoifj,
The report that the n.n.u.. .
cretly bulldltic a rnllw...
on the triinH.Mmi..iwv...i Pt
vfruuii imp .f,...
the Russo-Chlnese frontier to K"
on the Great Wall, about
from Pekln, has caused something
n flutter In T.-..,.l...i , ",u U(
... ... 1Qe flig
is said to have been made by . ,
eler who vrvi making his way thro?!"
the roimtrv In .1lu..i 1 tDroilrt
cated'the intelligence to an X
newspaper.' While at Ki!n, .
situated on the river of the sante urn.
II limit lllYtv.Hvo nilluo "S
' iium lt8 JQactloh
with the Argun, one of th. Tr
tributaries of the Amur, he saw T
oiiuv.wou.uniu wim laborers and m
way material moving away to Z
south on a newly constructed Z
roughly laid track. He at onc M
iu me cunciusiun mat what he u
hud to do with a new onrt hith-..
heard of line of railway, and appesnj
"uiaiueu inroruiatlon enj
lug his conclusions. Should this nen
prove to be correct, the fact ih ..
wut lilt
Russian government has serin...!.
dertakfti this work Is of great political'
ami military significance.
It was known at the time of "theout-
oreuK in cniua, in isu), that the Ro
sinus hud exploring parties nut ....
ining the country between KIulm.
the frontier line Just south of Ufc
iiaiKiu, aim Kuigan, along the regular
tea caravan track. Later It
derstood thut the route traced out tu
not entirely satisfactory, and that i
more easterly one was to be sought ot
the western side of the Khlngan chain
or mountains, that divides Mongolia
from Manchoorla. Evidently such a
route has been found, and the nolitii
situation ln the far East, together m
the military exigencies arising out
it, hits led the Uusslan government fa
hasten the construction of the railttj
wnien is to bring Pekln In direct ci
uection with the Siberian line through
Kalgnn.
The building of this railway mats.
Kallar, where It starts from the mala
Mnnchoorinn line, n- point of great
strategic Importance, and we ibill
probably learn In time that It has t
come one of ltusshi's principal mllltarj
centers ln Eastern Asia. From
troops can be sent at short notice Mull
or southeast, or called for, and boil
It and the railway to Kalgan m
be considered beyond danger of attack.
they being covered all along the ait
side by the Khlngan mountains, tit
passes over which will probably bt
held by the Russians. The dlstanct
from Kallar to Kalinin Is about IK
miles, nt least 3(10 miles shorter (bit
the originally projected route from the
Siberian line eust of Lake Baikal,
through Klnkhta and L'rca.
There is not likely to be any friction
between Russia and England out
this action on the part of Russia, En
gland having divested herself of ant
right to protest by the Auglo-Kussian
convention of IS!)!) respecting ail tbil
part of China north of the great wall
Any trouble connected with It, If !!
would be with Japan. An effort :U
be made to have the rails laid
whole distance by the end of the com
ing autumn. New York Sun.
SHE FOUND THE SPOOL
A Tale Polntinir Out the Dancer "
Too Mnch Haite.
One Washington household w
thrown into a state of confusion out
morning last week. Mrs. Blank f
seated at the sewing machine busily
engaged ln her work, but she
time to frequently shower her pet H
Prulser with endearing terms. W'
lug just emptied a spool, she threw it
to the dog at her feet. Bruiser grW
ed and, as his mistress thought, gull1
down the spool.
With a shriek, Mrs. Blank imam
ed the member of her household. W
found her seated iu the middle of H
floor with the dog In her lap flam
ally, but faithfully, trying to eitract
the spool which she told them !
could plainly feel In the dog's u
"What are you all standing I"
forr she cried. "Can't -you-do
thing? Won't you do something.
the poor thing Is choking roUH"
Look at his eyes! Help! help!"
Naturally everybody wanted to
The neighbors by this time w
pressed their willingness to assist
when It came to the thing of ttt
passing her idol over to o"1'"
Utl, ,.fon.l Kl.o n-nllld not It"
. in ii n i iini ii. v ' n - .
her dog's life Into other btti
her own, so she continued the i
.... . ... H.-..isr enonrw
w im a vigor w incii "
nlth nliannittannl vltfllitV.
Finally the little dog fell over?
linlYuHon which CSlle
- ' . -...ii ... i. y
mm-a chi-Uko Ifnr the first tlDie '
Blank's eyes left the dog' fj
Looking around the room in ear
tion she saw the empty 8po
had rolled into a corner l"Rte,
Bruiser's throat. Her stare, her
her whole attitude. In fact t
tale, and Immediately the pw
ployed means by which the (M
a . - uionK k-i
' resusc tated. Had .Mrs.
a1 In IP
tinned her hunt ror me !A
er s throat much longer hk hnJ
i hi I,.rvns.-RPM
ton Post. .
Too Grall... L-
"1 like to see people com"-
marked Fllmsicus, "oiii w"7
cuts his stogies in two m
and gets ten smokes for five J
Tyte Phlst does. I think, uy
hp'a n llttlo tnn rielllirloUS to '
I ui.T.nnrt((f
We are never so iorciui - - w
that the fanner should not J
lack of farm hands, if the la8 " J
mm. as wnen we see iri
i loafing In a hammock wltft a I
week dav '
Reciprocity l a good WW- j
, want friends, reciprocate, p