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About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1903)
THE AMERICAN GIANT IS I ■ nd companionship aud devotion, and tbe cow, th» next animal to be domes ticated aud to give her milk, abuuld have been held sacred? The history of civilization Is a development of wor ship. By superstitions—If you caro to call them that—man lias been lighted on bls way to progress. Yet we kuow These Turkish atrocities are becom no more about Immortality to-day than ing nearly as deadly as footbull. the first cave man did In the beginning Tbe Indian still hopes for a land rich Nome’s gold output will l>e small this in game, the Turk fur a celestial ha year, but Its graveyard keeps growing rem, tbe Christian aud tbe Jew for World. They have been retarded by our Institutions, no rapidly. gates of gold and streets of jasper, tbe I Fuel of the Future. doubt, and In case we adhere to present Ideals, their fur Asiatic for reincarnations on earth. The T was recently calculated that the visible coal ther action may not be destructive to personal liberty and Peru can certainly report progress. scoffer, noting these contradictions, supply—which is never visible till it Is brought national virility as in other countries, ancient and modern. It has seated a new President with no pretends they are all but misty super to the surface, hence the real meaning is. the At the same time, there are few who will not regret that shooting. stitions. Maybe they are. Perhaps calculated supply—would last the world for the day of the small, independent American farmer Is they are only shadows of the truth. about a hundred years longer. But within a giving way to that of the landlord.—New York News. It must be bargain day when the as But the truth Itself—tlie firm belief In few weeks reports of remarkable discoveries sessor cal's. I e ause fortunes are al Immortality—has been through count of new beds have been brought from the Mid ways marked down. less cycles of generations inbred in dle West, where anthracite is alleged to have been dis Money in Fact and Fiction. the human mind; It Is the very core of cowered; from the South, especially in Tennessee, about <0 IIESE are strange times In the accumulation of L'NXP Mr. Peary will make another dash all civilization, th - nu 1 us of all devel miles from Knoxville, and in the Peace ltlver region of fortunes—stranger than any fiction could ever for the pole and then another dash for opment, the force of all progress, ami IN3TPUCT/OH Athabasca, where it 1» claimed that 250,0)0.0(0 tons are "in have made them. Think of it for a momentl the box office receipts. It can no more be cast out of a single sight.” The supplies In China are also considerable and If Andrew Carnegie, a canny little Scotch boy. mind than can the difference between Grant Land and Grinnell Ijind can be reached more easily “What would the nation be without a human brain and that of a monkey. came to this unknown land a few decades ago women?“ frantically asks a magazine The proof? The world is full of it. In future, there are deposits in those Arctic regions that barefooted, and last year offered to settle the may be worked at a profit. writer. That’s easy. Htag nation. Venezuelan Imbroglio between Germany, Eng- The whole history of the development And In spite of tbe activities of forest choppers and of man la proof of what the belief has burners, farmers, and others who utilize the products of land, France, and Italy and the South American republic A tierman missionary has been at done for him. The whole vast differ by loaning Venezuela the entire sum of these international GEBWi i tacked by Chinese pirates. Another ence that ilea today between mankind the soil, the world is still putting forth so considerable a debts, And yet a fortune so huge as to permit of such quantity of vegetation that the making of new coal may big chunk of tetrltory for Wilhelm. offers Is as nothing to the power of another man. Mr. and apfdom Is proof. be going on, unconscious to us, and not to lie completed for Rockefeller, personally a quiet American citizen from centuries. Every bog Is a possible peat bed, and ¡» “ at is but Land grabbers have shown a con If chairs of common sense will bring Cleveland, a simple liver, with few habits of luxury, could rt2A.WZ7? temptuous disregard of "Keep off the young ministers Into contact with com unhardened coal. The great fern forests and marshes of easily buy half a dozen of the Independent kingdoms of calamus that we are burning now under our boilers and in grass” signs in the Indian Territory. mon things and common people, let us Europe; could without feeling It to any great extent in his grates no longer exist, but we have certain of their ana have i liuirs of common sense In all tbe pocketbook take up the debts of all the republics of Central logues, and no attempt lias been made by scientific authori Buenos Ayres lias come to the front theological seminaries In the country. and South America. with 990,000 Inhabitants. It seems We are all tired of the ministers who ties to estimate the mass or value of potential fuel that is Again, in 1844, Alexander Dumas published a book Laing stored in odd corners of the earth to-day. that there are others besides us after know so little of common things and of called "The Count of Monte Cristo,” the basis of which Is THE. But possibly the fuel of the future will be water. That all. _________ _ common people that they have to the fabulous wealth of an individual. The Count finds a AHEKICAH Is, we shall not turn much of it, but we shall use it for preach about Assyrian cuneiform In cave full of almost priceless jewels. He buys men’s lives; It will never do to again s|>eak of heating purposes by converting the force of its fall Into scriptions, or about Shakespeare's hero he spends money everywhere; he comes to Paris with a Vesuvius as “she” or “her” after learn MW ines, or about Huxley's mistake*. electric currents, as they are doing already at Niagara and notice from his Italian bankers giving him unlimited credit ing that It has thrown rocks a distance on the upi» “ r Hudson. For our posterity the blazing hearth Archaeology, metaphysics, poetry and fl on a Paris bank. There Is no limit on what be can draw of tMM) feet. science can all be made Interesting shall i.et burn; the fiftnlly will collect about a steel plate, on from M. Danglers. It Is entirely unprecedented. Nothing cold nights, and do the cooking over a metal basket. Most In reply to “Please Answer,” we and Illuminating to a congregation, but of the wood will be obliterated by that time, and with like It was ever known before. He draws five millions of fl would say that the Nublime Porte Is only by a man who knows bow and them of course, the streams will go; hence we must look to francs, and ruins the banker, and still no complaint from where to apply them to tbe lives of his SO called because of Its sublime nerve his Roman house. He rights wrongs; he saves more lives; auditors. Therefore tbe minister must see the power of the ocean converted to electricity. But it and sublime indifference. he punishes the guilty by the use of unlimited wealth. And know the live« of hts auditors. What Is a comfort to know that we have coal to burn for a few then by and by he leaves Maximilian on the island of Monte years. — Brooklyn Eagle. President Roosevelt condemns the are the books that people read now Cristo with his bride and sails away. As Maximilian sees use of profanity. In the President’s adays? They are not usually the books his ship disappear on the horizon, he finds Monte Cristo s w ritten by recluses. They are not usu estimation no stronger swear word will leaving him his whole fortune. ThlB fortune, Dumas ally the books written by men who than "bully" is ever necessary. suggests in two or three places, was one hundred million have received a purely literary and francs—<20,000,000. It is the greatest private fortune the All the powers have agreed upon It academic training, and who have lived Frenchman could conceive of in 1844—it is considerably less thftt the Nultan is to be reformed, but purely literary and academic lives. than the income of John D. Rockefeller in 1903.—Harper'« They are the books written by men like It Is doubtful If they will succeed In Weekly. convincing the Sultan that such Is the Mark Twain, Bret Harte, George Ade, Stephen Phillips, Lincoln J. Steffens, case. Jack London, Rudyard Kipling, and Hard Working Human Heart. A London soapmaker is clamoring many others, great and small, who OME one with an aptitude for statistics has have actually seen the things they ar« for the next chance at racing for the been doing a little calculating on the subject of cup. The excellence of Handy Hook writing about. This Is an age for the \ RELATIVE! the human heart and its activities. The nor as an advertising medium is being man who knows the world about him mal heart. It appears, beats about seventy-tive ^»ROPORTlOlf and not for tbe man who draws hla properly recognized. times in a minute, so that an hour’s record spiritual sustenance from written rec 70F THE would be something like 4,320 beats. Suppos- A man slipped on a banana peel, fell ords. What Is true of books Is true There can be no mistaking the trend. lng that a man lived to be 50. his heart would have beaten GERMAN under a train and lost a hand. If peo of sermons. We have no time for the t of larger holdings and an Increase of the 1.892.100,000 times. If a son of this man, more robust than ple generally realized the peril that minister who reads all the week and army . his father, should fill out the Scriptural allotment of three lurks In the Innocent looking banana Sunday morning disgorges him.“elf of be expected by one who has studied the score years and ten his heart beats would number 2,049,- ÄRMV peel they would make their wills and his reading. What we want is a ser people to flock into the towns and cities. 024,000. It Is easy to understand, after such a computation, mon permeated. It Is true, with supe Of TMC carry accident Insurance. why this hard-working servant of the human body so rior learning, but nevertheless con U.S. in frequently wears out.—Harper's Weekly. The chewing gum trust recently dis structed out of the dally facts of dally COMPAR tributed »900,000 In dividends. This existence. This does not mean that a J “SON sum represents 90,014),000 sticks of goial minister must preach about wom Fresh Air and Sound Health. gum at the retail price of a cent a en's hats or about the latest murder. HERE are many persons who seem afraid of stick, llow many million other sticks The title of his sermon may be “Th* A STARTLING AND SIGNIFICANT COMPARISON. the fresh air. A little rain, a little wind, a were sold to yield that profit is an in Stigmata of Nt. Francis.” Aa he dis Th« American giant Is th« American school child. little fog, a little chill in the air will keep them teresting problem which the reader cusses the stlgniata of St. Francis, Under Instruction tn tbe public schools of th« United State« are ABU within doors. Going out, they bundle up in however, one will perceive tn bls Illus may try to solve if he choose. children. Of these 7.841,570 are boys and 7.Tfll,881 girl«. clothes so thickly that one would think they trations and In bls applications tbat he In Chicago, according to the census of 1902. there were 220.42148 Taught to piny ball. Latln-Amerl- lias *;>ent many days and many nights were tender shrubs transplanted from soma caus would for> go rel ellloti and bull with people as well as w ith books, aud more genial clime. The healthy people, how In the schools, making an average yearly Increase of 15.871. Tbe :st this year fights and expend their energies In that he has lived In the hearts of per- ever, are not the health cranks, not the people who run to Is much greater, the estimates of attendance ranging troa »1 284,000. three-base hits and home runs. Al sons of the twentieth century. For the doctor every time they feel an ache. They are to the peo The statistic« for 1903 show that the entire German «ray, «Mf« ready It lias pacified whole provinces such a map. skilled In the knowledge ple who walk a great deal in the fresh air, who live In the in our oriental archipelago. Let us of the hutkan“ heart, consumed with open as much as they can, and who take a vacation In the peace footing, is composed of 005,811 men, while the army of the 01 States in 1902, while on a peace footing, numbered only 63,686 mea-tti take a hint and send, not more teach love of the human race, and disciplined country every year —San Francisco Bulletin. American. ers. soldiers and alleged statesmen to by study nnd meditation, there will al our colonies, but teams of professional ways be an audience. In literature the 8TURDY AMERICAN FIGURE. portfolio of the interior, under Taylor, mer and have to wear their winter ball players. man who think* he can write because 1 hlbltlon. A room of that zital ASSENDS THE HIGHE8T PEAK. and organized that department. Among clothes or last year's suits and lie has studied Ruskin's construction Thomu* Ewing, Our First Secretary I just In the same w«r >1 the measures recommended In his first dresses. This one wears good clothes of the Interior. Examination of the pupils In the pub of sentences Is rescued from Immedi Mi** Peck Perform* Remarkable Feat bred woman wno Cianot txg« Certain events in the Indian office report. Dec. 3, 1849, were the estab —summer clothes, of the newest pat in Kouth America- lic schools of Boston has shown that ate oblivion only by the observer’s gown she 1« wearing. I tern, and promenades in Broadway lishment of a mint near the California nearly all the children enter school momentary laughter. In the church the have directed attention to that depart- Aided by oxygen carried in cans and Furniture has a voice)® 11 w like a queen. When she's signed, and gold mines, and the construction of a with normal eyes. In the hlghei man who thinks lie can preach be ment and have caused cotnparisous to the hot weather Is on to stay, she'll other carefully selected helps to the clothe*. True art in fuKubatHj be mnde between railroad to the Pacific. grades one-fourth are found to be cause be lias studl'sl Newman's figures modern mountain climber, a woman— ! in allowing a home to iM"! When Thomas Corwin became Sec go down to the shore or Into the coun the pre ¡-sent head myopic, and In the colleges from 00 of apeeech will have the same fate. Miss Annie S. i under the tastee of tbowrto*! retary of the Treasury in 1850. Ewing try and enjoy herself. Dresses well, thereof and the to 70 per cent are said to be thus af The sermon writer n eils an even deep Peck of Chicago _ the adoption of an idea her*.i^* Next winter first secretary, was appointed to succeed him In the looks well, lives well. fected. In other words, n<-ar sighted er acquaintance with common thing* —has attained the there. The development tejiwj Senate. During this term he opposed she'll pay her hotel bills, with no In Thomas Ewing. In news increases steadily from the pri and with common pe< pie tlinn the story highest altitude and cultivation. No bjtue»! cidental».’ sterling integrity the fugitive slave law. Clay’s compro mary sclio I upward n bald statement writer. The story writer simply «hows ever reached by in can be complete «t cm »| mise bill, reported a bill for the estab “That one over there, the seedy one, they were alike; in of fact which mak-a evident the neces us things and people. The sermon man. She has ac home of comfort unfold» irf'l lishment of a branch mint In Califor couldn't buy a cigar at a cut-rate the experiences of sity of every possible care. writer has to show 11* tilings and peo complished the speak, and unfolds «lovj their Ilves wholly nia, and advocated a reduction In post Store. He’ll come out all right, though. ple in their spiritual possibilities. A feat of ascending | provement comes in thiz age. and the abolition of slavery In the Never has a cent, but always at work. unlike, Ewing is The New York newspapers have di*- professor of common sense In a theo Mount Sorata, in no other way. one of those Inter District of Columbia. He retired from He’s just In from a long tour. Pret cuvered a young man, an employe for logical seminary could talk on this Bolivia, whoae Everything about « »”""1 public life In 1851 and again resumed ty late for stock, but he's an old eight years of a street railway com point every day and never talk too esting figures of height is estimat upon the way in P0***?' . his law practice In Lancaster He was s’ager and may land. A good many pany. who, by his own admission, has much. whom the student tuomas swinu. ed from 21,000 to beginning made wlttoc’L/J a delegate to tbe Peace Congress of eke out the year's income by play worked sixteen hours a day, at an av of American history finds so many. 25,000 feet, and is given to wbat we tre 1861. Barbarous Punishment ing summer engagements at various erage wage of ten cents an hour, ever Born near West Liberty. Ohio Coun it mrans buy«* —C J exceeded only by waste; It was sixty year* ago that England During the Civil War Ewing gave, theaters throughout the country. Near bXre longwearerouh-M since he has been with the company. ty, Va„ Dec. 28. 1789. lie was the son the unconquered On the face of It, here la provocation al>oll>>hed flogging nt sea; It has long of a revolutionary father. It was in through the press and by correspond ly every city of any size has from one peaks of the Him I not what we wanted U« for lurid oratory; but la-fore indigna been Hlrollslied In our army and navy; the region of Athens County. Ohio, ence and personal interviews, his coun to half a dozen «tock companies this ‘ we are sure to become ttr* alayas. sel and influence to the support of the and now the Czar of Russia ha* al«ol summer: the summer-stock business tion rises to too high a pitch, let it be then unsettled, that be was reared. national authorities. While I In haste means repenting "J Some scientists Ished tbe harahest remnant* of the he de lias grown enormously in the last two added that the young man was ap Hla sister taught him to read, and in voted much of bis time to believe Sorata to Where the income is U® ’; 1 Imrbarbl« ’ punishments of* former political or three year*, and gives employment pointed general manager the other day. the evening* he studied the few books be even higher | ticularly must be eierc 1’erhaps his wllllngnem to work long time.*, namely, castigation with cudg at bls command. In his 20th year he subjects, the law was his favorite to hundreds. Not enough to go round, »«J than tbe Hima tlon of choice. study and pursuit. He early els and cat-o' nine tail*, chaining to won and th ugh. The best people, as a rule, hours had something to do with bls left bls home and worked In the Kana We must let our borne laya peaks, and it maintained throughout his life unques don't play summer engagements, al the car aud shaving the head, which promotion. wha Salt establishments, pursuing ills tionable supremacy at the Ohio bar. though there are exceptions. Com MISS ANWIK B. PECK. Is possible that likes and dislikes. Tbe were still inflicted for certain offenses studies at night by the aid of the fur 'speak its owner«' t««’». □ and ranked tn the Supreme Court of paratively few of the lest play sum when tbe measurements made by Mia« The longest distance a man has ever on persons exiled to |>enal settlements nace fires. He remained there till be and not the ta.tes tbe United States among the foremost Peak ’ s expedition are received man mer stock, unless driven to It"_ New thrown a baseball Is a little more than or to the mine*. Castigation with the had earned enough money to clear will b« known to have reached the | neighbors or friends \ork Evening Post. •"81 feet. The record for women w as cat o' nine tails and even w ith cudgel* from debt the farm his father bad lawyer« of the nation. lu 1829. Just after tils father’s death. highest point in the world, and the house rarely is 1° P1,c* '. ■> held, until recently, by a Vassar cham not Infrequently ended In death, nnd bought in 1792, and had qualified him Wordsworth and His Neighbors. Let the *«rt be honor of having accomplished this will pion, who threw a ball INI feet. There was one of the harshest form* of the self to enter the Ohio University at General William T. Sherman, then a 1 he worthiest of Wordsworth's vil of one's own orU1»^ - has now arisen In Tacoma, Wash , a death penalty, being death by torture Athens, where. In 1815, be received boy of 9. was adopted by Mr. Ewing, lage tn the lake country of England had be a woman’s. Miss Peck, who Is well known a« a I pendence upon tbe Ide* _ young woman who beat that record by The abolition of the cudgel and of the the first degree of A. H. that was ever who afterward appointed him to the their own ideas of his value as a man United States Academy, ami In I860. mountain climber and Is known social nlture p«ople « twenty four feet. Anatomists have "cat" does not, however, mean the pro grante«l In that section. He then stud ami poet When questioned after hts be a factor in the frequently explained that the forma hlbltlon of rorporal puulshment alto ied law lu Lancaster, was admitted to Sherman married Ellen, tbe daughter death as to his personality, they read ly in Chicago and other large cities of home. Do not •** of his benefactor. tbe country, was accompanied on the tion of a woman's shoulder-blade pre gether. The revised statute of June 15 the bar In 1816, and practiced with ily admitted that he was kind to those trip by President W A. G. Tight of complete every room,«■ vents her from throwing straight ami prescrlbM chastisement with birch success for fifteen years. In 1831-37 who were In sickness or need. They the University of New Mexico and furnished for the "«•VgU STAGE PEOPLE IN SUMMER. far; but the Tacoma record, 21» feet. rods up to Its* blow* Barbaric pun its serve«! as United States Senator could count on blm on a pinch. But he three guide«, one of whom is Antoine It finished always shows, Is just altout the distance from tlie ishment can be inflicted by birch rods. from Ohio, having been chosen aa a Son»« of Them Have a Hard Time In of th* effort-2!2iL^ did not hobnob with bl.s neighbors Maquiguaz. who guided Sir Martin deep outfield to the home plate. Evo If not a* severely as by ' eat" or cudg TidIns Over. Whig. He supported the protective ' He did not notice them much," said < onway, the noted Bngliiffi explorer, lution teem* to be at work producing eL The better way would be to abol tariff system of Clay, and advocated Raia •»>’ In summer what becomra of the an old man. In answer to questkms when be attempted and failed to do should»**-blades that will enable the lah punishment by flagellation alto a reduction in the rates of postage, a In Chicago '«> numbers of stage people who returu asked by the author of Lake Country what Mtsa Peck has accomplished. American girl to shara the delights of gether. Leslie's Weekly. there had been no ra.n J recharter of the United State« Hank, to tbe metropolis penniless at the close Sketches.” * The ascent of Mount Sorata crowns the national game. and the revenue collection bill, known of tbe season? How do they live? - A »'m_Sr°W and ,n aul<1 blu* cloak six glnse pl» ’ " Kaiser Wilhelm's Modesty. a remarkable career of mountain tnebe* square were exp" aa the "force bill." ----- ■ - - The«« question* were put to the man wa« bls rig." < TOntlnUR1 At dinner one night when the Em The human mind, since It began to climbing by a woman who in a few «tree!a for one ®*n .««rtfl 8«-nator Ewing opposed the removal ager of th« theatrical agency in “And a* for his habits, ■ - he think and believe, baa thought of and peror was staying with I »rd lonadale. — bad —J nonn. years has ascended tbe highest peaks of deposlta from tbe United States Broadway. "Indulgent landladies, Nlver knew blm witM a pot 1’ bis of Europe and America, Including were then Incubated believe«! In Immortality. Mauklnd early a guest talking to another across the tide of dust to whir Hank, and Introduced a bill for the hand or friends In tbe country, and parents " pipe 1' bls mouth.' dlvidtsl Into races widely separated in tatde quoted a little known passage Mount Orizaba in Mexico, which la clinging would won_ After deep probing the vastly different climes and conditions, from Shakapetre. and, that there settlement of the Ohio boundary ques tn the city solve the summer problem author 18.600 feet high, and, next to Mount with a colony of rty" |d but wherever the human mind Is that should tie no mistake as to Its source, tion. which was passed In 183« Dur for hosts of tbeattlcal people." replied brought out: McKinley. Is the highest peak In North be seen and "Ye*. ing tbe same session he brought for tbe agent. "An actor would sootier Wordsworth wss fond of a America. Mount McKinley being 20.000 thought and belief Is also. Is It any end«*! with the word«, "as tbe divine per piste was 1.*» ^4fl wonder that when primitive man first William said." Ther« happen*«! to be ward a bill for tbe reorganization of atarve than be *<-en by his mate* IbSI d di aner at time«, if you could feet. Miss Peck Is a graduate of the day following n r was t* job.” learned that by standing upon his h.nd a lull In the conversation at the time, the general land office. which was working at an other trade. About 72 5 get h m t It I nlverslty of Michigan and formerly fell, and on th» nex. T 1 th OoflJt'SS was legs and wielding a atone with hla fore- and the remark »»» audible to every passed and be also presented a me per cent of those who remain bet* was professor of Latin at Smith Col were exposed at the-|ffi again morial for tbe abolition of slavery. ton get trusted for tbetr summer's boan •d lege. pans he could leat off an enemy, be one. the Emperor Included. Turning to Ktsah after nrrs. wb.rn an r n jpj In July. 1836, tbe Secretary of the and lodging. They pay up, in tm>s: ahould invent the stuns with reveren his host, the Kmper >r said, with a pui- 'X the roads but 270 colon;*»- . "1 Treasury Iseued what was known as FURNISHINGS OF A HOME. cases, in the course of tbe next mm tial awe? la It any wonder tbat when zled expression 'Curlously, I do not amt always he found out that by striking two rememlte; tbat my sainte«! grandfather the "specie circular." Thia directed son. sending from week to week t< was ter’ble Essence nt F,1ecance Lie« la Sim *nt receivers In lan«l office to accept pay tbe landlady sufficient to cancel tbeti piece« of flint together he could start a ever said that!“- M. A. P. Mks ye mun plicity anil Good Tasts. ments only in gold, silver or treasury summer ’ s hidebtrflhif** • Tr»»,F' fire to save him from the cold of tbe Means o I 1 certlflcat«“«. except from certain class There Is no Idea more eflMMotM Serenade and Illumination. “Of course.’ went on tbe agent atendlly-enemacbing Ice period, be The railrood Toro—Wasn’t it lonely out in tba es of persons for a limlte«! time. Sen "they're not all Improvident. 8ee that han that it require* a liberal exp-n.li should worship fire? la It any wonder a* twenty tea« ator Ewing brought In a bill to annul little g'.rl going out?” He pointed to a ti ire of money to have a comfortable that when be discovered tbat grains country? Id set his head a and the gres this circular, and another to make it and artistic home. Tbe very cmin - ‘ t- Jerry Ixvnely? We bad crickets and petite figure In tbe ceaseless stream of sown upon the tumuli of tbe desd h’s hands beh In t of elegance lies in simplicity. It Is not transport •• n “Got plenty of money— sprouted and produced again be should lightning bugs In our bedroom every unlawful for the Secretary to make applicants, he would «tart a art to make a parlor the duplicate of can carry night. — I*etro1t Free Prana. such a discrimination, but these were enough to last her until th* season conclude that the grateful ghost be um, bum. bum. an exhibition rom In a furniture not carried. car After the expiration of opens and a bit to spare They call It is « It neath thus repaid him an hundredfold * long enough, store That s mply calls for an outlay hla term be resume«! tbe practice of bee stingy on the nsd. be-» end or**** “ tlie offerings be had made? la It any again. I sup. law. Ewing became Secretary of tbe I v ----- - ...j > of money without any exercise of t iste. love with won't spend h er money. Izingh Is e k wonder that the dog. the flrat friend Treasury In 1841. under Harrison, and her side now. Many of '< There I» no tene to such a room—no bit. to come to man and lend him warmth No one e’ air of ripose, no comfort, no Indivldu- in 1849 accepted the newly created without a rag to their isu^r Co* suu> slit/- It sr«aka io* what lt Is—an ex- false teetA. ™E AMERICAN OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS SC ikku The 'American Giant T a J .J J 1 1 1 J «1 1 J J J