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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1900)
WW VsWv '- -SSSN a,WVv for Infants and Castoria Is a harmless unbstitute for Castor OH. Pare, goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It i3 Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. t It destroys .Worms and allays FeverfehneMs. r It f"n-s Iiarrlioea and Wind Colic, it relieves Teeth ing Troubles and cures (Constipation. It regulate the Stomach and liowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The 31other's Friend. The Kind You Have uears tne In Use For Over 30 Years Walter Morley GOOD FAHMS FOR SALE From $6 to 25 peraci c These lands arc in Marion county, Oregon, and are offered on eisy terms of payment. They were taken under bretclsure by ; non-residents.- hence are offered for less thin. -similar farms held by resident owners. For full, par- ticulars and description call on or address Macmaster & P.irrell, 311 Worcester block, Portland, Oregon, or B0Z0RTH BROTHERS 8ALKM. OREGON. , NOTICE. .-' Whereas; Pudding . j River and its tributaries, in -Marion j county. -Oregon, Iwvc be-en stocked with black siottcd trout; and for the -protection of the same and by, anthorit v vested in tnc uinkr tine proivi -.ions ot the Act of Oc jtiitvr 17th. ijS. I declare said "stream clsed: and hereby give notice that i shall be ' unlawful for any person to fislr for, catch or take,; any mountain or brook trout, or any black spotted Hour, or any otlk-r fi.od fishes int-m the waters of the aforesaid Pudding Rivcr. or any of its tributaries in Marion county, Oregon.! aboye -a point known as -McCallister's Flouring Mill, between the josh day r f April. - ioo. and the 1st -day of April. 1002: and any person fishing for. r catching fish in any ot the-alMve named streams, between the dates herein Mentioned 'will bv prose cuted to the full extent of the law. F. C. REED. W4t. i Fish Commissioner. "GARDEN AND GRASS SEEDS 1 We carry a coin pic te line of seeds in Hi"-, 0"r seeds ' are all new and selected stock. A choice line of SWEET PEAS and! FLOWER seeds just rece'ved. ; Call and secure your choice I j Prices lowest in the state. Send for catalogue. BREWSTER ;& WHITE, No. 91. Court St., Salem. Flit FENCE FOST, coated with , ..Carbolirieum j Avenarius.. f Will out wear Clar It Is ntso a Radical Itunuly Ajramat Ohlckeii Lice, lt.4 application t th insJe walla f poul try houses will irriiai-Mtly ex terminate all LICE, llesull: Healthy Chickens Plenty egif. Wrlu fr circular tid prices anl men tkni this p.-ip-r. II. M. WAUK ft OO.. Acwta. SALEM, OKEUO.V. SALEM IRON W0RJ(S Your Work! Solicited. GEORGE E. SLY, Sufi DAIRYMEN . tliose wishing to ! sell creani to the Creamery, now beirtj? built in Salem by T. S. Towniend. iw ill please call on or- write Secretary H. B. Thielsen. of the Chamer of Commerce, and. if ar rangement. camiot be made to collect by teams, we -wilt have it shipped by boat or rail, j T. S. Townscnd. .. dlt-wtf. j : BIDS FOR WOOD WILL BE RE ceived by the! undersigned committee at the otTice of 1 L A. Johnson. J. 1 -. for wood, as (follows to wit: Up to noon, of April 9.11900. a deposit of M)c per cord for oak and 25c per cord for fir. will be required of the suc cessful bidder as a guarantee ' . fil invent of contract, which deposit must be made within 5 days of ac ceptance of bid. i The wood to be de livered at the following named places: East schoob--fir. J25 cords; Park school fir. to cords; North school Oak 10 cords, fir (to cords: Lincoln school -O.-ik.' 5 cords; fir 60 cords; Central school-Qak. 5 cords; fir 10 ' cordis. The oak. to te of good split v tKdy, or grub wood, i The fir. to be of what is know ass large body wood. i' not second growth. The right to rc- r i ject any or all Lids is reserved. Wm. t M. Cherrington. H. A. Johnson. II. C. Fletcher, Suppty Committee. School Dist-i No 24, Marion county, Oregon. ! V r d2t-w 3 - i . : an 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - svy Children. Always Bought Signature Dealer in all kinds of Woven Wire Fencing Send for circulars. GET OUR PRICES CH HOP WIRE NO. 50 STATE STREET. ; SALEM. OREGON. SUMMONS In the Circnit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Marion. Uepartment No. 2: , Salem Building. and Loan Associa tkn. Plaintiff, v. H. C. Downing. Theodosia A. Downing, his wife, and (je. W. Watt. Defendants. To If. C. Downing: In the name ff the State of Oregon vou are required to a-ppear and answer the 'complaint filed against you. in the above entitled suit, on or. before the ; last day of the time prescribed in the order for publication of summons. trade herein, to-wit: the twentieth day , of April. 1000, and if you fail so to tanswer. forwant thereof, the plaintiff ; will take Judgment against H. C. i Downing and Theodosia A. Downing, j bis. wife, for the sum of $1,575 gold jcoin- of the United States of America, jwith interest on said claim in hike gold coin at the rate of 8 per cent. per annum from the date of said judg jment until paid, together with the sum 'of $56.41 taxes paid by plaintiff, with j interest thereon at the rate of six er 'cent, per annum on $42.16 from' the firt day of May. 1K09. and on $1405 from the fourth dav of December. anI for the further sum of $100 ; attorney's fees and the costs and dis jbursemenrts of this suit, and for a de jcrce of this Honorable Court, that plaintiff's mortgage be declared a first jlien upon the fallowing. '.1 escribed pi cm-ises; to-wit: i Lot four (4) in block cn OI in Watt's addition to the city of Sr.lcm. ( Oregon, as shown and designated on !tle flat r.f said addition now of record ;in the office ff the "recorder -of convey ances for Marirm county. Oregon. I And that plaintiff's mortgage lien ,be foreclosed and that the above de scribed premises be sold bv the sher iff of Marion connty. Oregrin, as fy law nrovided and that th money aris ing from said sale be aoplied to the satisfaction of plnjntiff's judgment, at itorney's fees and costs, and for such jothcr and further relief as in cq'uiy ,oiav le iust: and further that vfu be I foreclosed of all right, estate or inter ' est in or to said above described pre ,mises and of all rivrht to redeem the sarr-f. except as bv law provided. This summons is served upon you by 'order of the Hon. R. P. T?oise. judge ;of the above entitled court, for de partment N said rr bearing , date rhe seventh day of March. 1000. 'directing the same, "published -in the j Weekly Oregon Statesman. for six consecutive weeks, and the date of the j first publication of this summons be jing on the 9lh - dav of March. 1000 land the, date of the last publication 'thereof will" be. and the same will'ex Ipire on the twentieth day of April. tooo. F. A. TURNER. 3 9 -t Attorney for Plaintiff. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OI ADMINISTRATOR. Notice is hereby given that I have this first day ot March, pjtxj, been ap pr;inteI by 'the county court of Marion county. Oregon, administrator of the estate of Thomas J. White, deceased, late of said county. Ail persons hav ing claims against said estate are here by notified to oreserit the same to me at Whiteaker. in said county, duly cer tified to as by law provided, within six months from the date of - this notice. This the eleventh dav of March. in. J. T. HUNT. Administrator of said Estate. .w 5t- FINAL NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX To all wliom it may concern: No tice is ."hereby given that the un.ieT sigmcnl executrix of the estate of G. C. Aplin. deceased, ha this day filed in the county court for 'Marion county. fr.Mfr.n her final account in sail estate. and thai the court has fixed and ap pointed Saturday, April 30. 1900. at in rt'-Wl- 1 5 nt of sai J - -dav. at the countv court room in said county as the time and place for hearing any ob jections to iuch final account and fir the settlement thereof. . ... J1AKV .AI'LI Executrix of the estate of G. C Ap lin. deceased. 3:.-5t-w- THE QUAKER Improved square folding bath cabinet. Price $5. Mrs. T. B. Fairbank and Mrs. J. A Sell wood, exclusive agents. Call on or address. 383 Front street, Salem. Oregon- Agents wanted. 3:3-imw,i. CONTRACTS TO LET. The Allen Evaporating and Cannery s Co. is 1 ready to contract for peas and toma toes for the coming season. For particulars call at their : office ?t . the I-annerv. ' a? tf W WANTED. TO BUY A FEW DUT - -.iin a rA S-v:ir- IOWI W70 svinc j ----- - ' -. cld. tor whlh the highest nartt prlee will be jwM- ThomaJW.tl Co.. S-ilem. . 5-i-tr. L.DIES Unrn to cm yorc.n dresses by the famous Stover Tai.or System, for sale at Mrs. A- IL i ar rar's dressmaking parlors, over Cross's market. - : wim. . PROFIT IN SHEEP. What a 'Benton County Farmer Made on iironi a smaa band 01 Wool and Mutton Producers. The following article is from the Cor- yall-s Time, of the 24th inst: liiis is a true story about the profit to be derived from the haridbng of sheep. A Benton county man. who for tne purposes 0! th:s article is. to be nameless. bought on a certain dar in last January twenty-eight head of sheep. and within the brief space oi tony- eight days made off of them clear profit of $2.50. or an average of nearly three dollars per tiead. Jo be exact, his net profit peT head -was $2.04. The sheep were ewes. in good condition. He paid tor them $5 per head. During the forty-eight days the increase was thirty five lamb;;. Uefore the end of the forty-eight days the Tambs were sold to the butcher at $2.50 per head, or $7.50. For pasturage on the outfit, during toe forty-eight days he paid' in all $5. He sold the original stock twenty-eight hai or ewes ior the same price he paid for them, or $5 per head. He then rig --.fed tip his account as follow?: Received for 28 head of ewes $140 00 Received lor 35 head lambs.... 87 50 Total Paid for 28 ew;s ..$14 00 Paid for pasturage 5 00 Ttal... .. .$227 50 145 00 Net profits 82 50 Of course sheep do not always yield such an abundant return as did this lot. Indeed it is only on rare occasions that the transaction could, from the stand point of profit, be duplicated. The deal er happened to strike the early market for sprfng Tambs. securing a price or $2.50 that later became only $2. His old stock, after disposing of .the lamfos, was in good condition, fit for the block, and hence valuable, both for mutton and wool. These conditions helped out the tranaction. and- gave the deal- ' er a profit greater than the best farmer in Benton county can make at wheat raising at average prices on the best forty acres of land in the county in a whole year of toil. For quick and certain returns, sheep are unquestionably the best property on the farm. An average sheep will pay for itself, or more, in a single year. A farmer ot much experience said yes terday that a small band of sheep would pay the running expenses of the farm artd give whatever wheat could !e grown as a clear profit to the grower. Everybody knows this to be practically true. 'And yet. they say' that many a 'aimer keeps no sheep. A man well informed on the subject declares that perhaps half the farms in Benton coun tv. and in Oregon are without sheep. How it could mi happen was a matter of amazement to him. He said that as; a liia'ter n fact that the men on farms where sheep were kept were thrifty, and, '.that generally speaking the oppo site was; true on farms where there were no shevp. ."I can. the moment I go to a farm." he sa-'d. "tell by die ap pearance ot things .whether or not there is a band 01 sheip on the place. If the sheep are not there the usual signs of prosperity are missing." -Perhaps this man had ari exaggerated notion, of the facts; perhaps not. In any event, it is certain that farmers have excellent o ponunities for helping themselves by engaging, as far as circumstances will permit, in sheep-raising. Twice-a-week Statesman. $1 a year. THE III SALEM CREAMERY Is not a business venture of lou l.ted' "stalility. It has been established in Salem' for two years, ami its patronage by the farmers within fifty miles of Salem is now three times greater than one year ago. Why Is the Salem Creamery Successful? Because It pays its patrons promptly the highest , market price... We are ready to WE 4 Take all cream offiered at.highe lar butter we can buy need every pouri Thirty thousand pounds. Merchants country butter will find it to their in our prices. We will run our wagon; butter, cream and eggs will jusfify. If ronu-e a wagon. Call a meeting of pat and we will send a representative to route. AIL patrons nt accessible to rail, stag-, or boat. Opera FAMES PATHWAY. ; Russia's czar ' has presented a new yacht to Prince George, of . Greece, who saved ills lite in Japan some years afro. ' .. ' t ! i During a sojourn on the slopes of Vesuvius for his., beakh. Professor piovanni Bovia has written a drama Ireece. the characters being Socrates, Nantippe and their two children It i interesting to note the numJer of eminent men oi the present day whose education began in a printifng office. W-illiam Dean I lowelk learned the, trade in Hamilton, O.; Amos j'J. Cunimings has set type in nearly every state of the union; Congressman James M. Robinson worked on the Fort Wayne, Ind., Daily News; Richard Watson Gilder, the poet-editor of he Century Magazine, once set type and did the press work on the St Thontias Register at Flushing. I- I. William P. Hepburn of Iowa used to be a com positor, and a fast and accurate one. So were -Charles B. Ixindis of Indiana. William H. 4Iinrichsen of Illinois, George D. Perkins of Iowa and a host of other prominent" men of the coun- ry- ""'-. :. ORIENTAL EMBROIDERIES. Soft satins and silks in Oriental em broidery are ; beautiful, and the latest idea in this line is to take Persian silk tablecovers heavy' -with embroidery for parts of a black or white warst, as collar-points, cuffs, yokes and over-fronts, drrped in surplice or fichu fashion, says khe Ladies Home Journal for Marc-h. Chiffon is embroidered in appliquer lace and silk designs, one ot the laiter showing: thrck raised roses, rorl all such work the material is Used as plain as iKXvsible. and in either, strong On ent-al or dainty pastel colorings. Chiffon eib roid ere d in eyelets, through which velvet ribbons are run. is one-of the .hand decorated materials which come front many a dressmaker's es-tablii.sh nient, as do, the gorgeously embroid ered Mlk re vers. DAIRYING DEVEIjOPM'ENT IN GEORGIA. Dairying is dcveloiwTig rapidly in Georgia, and a state dairyman's asso ctation was recently organized. 'Myron Rolnon. the office loy for Dr. Keylor. ot Walla Walla, leaned too far out of the second story win dow of the olTrve 4uiKling and fell to 1 . . 1... .-So i. ... 1 : .. nic ground, '.is in- Jj?W 1 " '"-'"en m tne air s as to strik-fln his leet in stead of' his head. The youngster was badly shaken up. and one of his ankles severely sprained, but no bones were broken. limn phMitier in the unit than anr aeeda thit Anlr mat half Ait much. Tested, true to name, fresh and reliable. Alwari tl ak .for Kerry laite no oiuwrm. Writ for 1W Sml Aaaoal. I. M. rtKBT m VO II accommodate all WILL. s market priees. Want all the granu d of country butter to fill one order of ii the valley towns dealing largely in tcrests to correspond with us and get in any section where the collection of your neighorhood are inclined it pit ron. notify us of the appointed tine attend your meeting and arrange the wagon route can le accommodated by DO YOU WANT A SEPARATOR .Thenbuy the De I-aval Disc Bowl, macliine. .A.disc bowl machine is the only absolute cream saver anj they cost but little more than a hollow bowl machine, that will waste in loss of cream in one year the full price of any . holW bowl machine. We sell these .separators on easy terms, and we guarantee them to skim clean -and to give satisfactior. If we can accom modate you we will please to have v h write U5- i ' : . . . 1 ; - . - . . - ? I? - : ? j- 4- : ' ' '. ;j;r..' Salem Creamerv Co. . ' I ; . - j : n : : 1 J i -v'...-- House Blk.9 Salem, Or THE GOLD ' : :'"".-". 1 . ' - ".. Unit of Valno and Standard of Value Explain- ed ---Silver iNever was Our Staiidard-The - . .1-.. .:...-......:.' .',-,. . -. - .' "Crime of 73" was a Free Coinage Act. (KpiiblUbed fraaa UiStatnaAa.a,r May XS, Editor Statesman: When the coinage law of 179-2 as pasesd congress determined. very wise- ly, to abandon the old cumbersome Enghsh -metlKKj. -ot pounus snuimgs, nehre and farthings, and adotit the, dec- imal system of dbllars. dimes cents, and mitts. . inereienx ar xne onic ui st numbers of Spanish dollarsTin circura- tion they wisely concluded tp make our dollar, or unit 4 value of' 'uai value. Congress enacted that when our com that is gold. All other, forms of so should be one unit.it shiuldibe made ot. called money are only represctatives of silver and contain X7ilA grains of pure m nm-v 5silvrr mrr; notrs. checks. silver When the coin should be ten units it should be of gold. anU contain 247 i grains of pure gx1d and the ratio was! established at 15 to 1. j Then the guld and sllV-,rt ?LPaAe VTF-" fu! tender at their BULLIOjN VnLUr.. and .continued so until the "crime of 1X7.T" (except S ubsidiarv siher coins to. iSsi). when the vrovernmerit would re- deem a-, gold xin not reduced, by natural abrasion more thaw one-nail ot one per cent after twenty years, circu lation. I . - Congress could not. and: did not at Imnt to establish a STANDARD OF ; , v,-r , . i -a :n XS.e :LPhT!V Vr be ond V ti, fnm ,, Sal wrld had To? cemuri recognS Sold as tlie only standard tat value, be- cause it -fulfillld all the requirements of a universal standard, of value. It is now, and wll be for centuries to come the only standard of value. Making .u ; vai.J-f iK-r in IV02 did not establish silver s " dard of value.: Neither idid the law of 1873 that made the one dollar piece crs ueneve mey arc goms m get mhiic of g.dd make gold the staiidard of val- thing for nothing. ; "'.,- 1 Since the "crime of 1873 we have . there is a great difference between ST NDARD of value and UNIT of value. Unit of vulue is siniplv the unit, ot figure 1, we add, mulwply, suo- itaru times. 1 ney sei-m to nave coin tract or divide in commercial trans- meitced just about the time the" demo actions. Standard of value is entirely ' crats came into power in tKo.2, and different. It is an raticle;of such uni- there has been the very same catastro-i versal unchangeable value that it ran phe every time the democrats v have be used to measure the Value of all come into jxiwer. 'And the reason is otluT articles- .with, and there is no elf evident. Tlie low' tariff ; policy threw other artkrle but gold that can be used millions and million of wage workers for that purpose, 'because I it has great out ovork. and ihe wages they were intrinsic value; it i tolerably scarce: it receit4nt sbippcd.! Tlie money that is easiJy transported; easily subdixiided .ought m have been in active circulaliou and re-united without loss, abundant was lovked up, and because money- be enough t supiily the wants of com- catiie scarce. 'the. calamity howler tried merce; untarmshable anl jDninant. . ami if any one doubts its intrinsic value let mm try t-o ouy it irom a n to i fn silver crank. . . To lurther dlustrate the oiiierence be-l ween "uniit." and "standard" take the bushel containing ;Bl5o.42cul ic inches If the busbe! measure is made ot ma terial that will . neither shrink nor swiH. expand or contract; it would be both a "unit and standard -bushel. If the measure is a sack rt would le a "unit" but a very kng ways fnmi a standard" bttsJu'l measure. -Also, take a foot rule made of box wood that would always!' be exactly twelve inches long; it j would' be a "unit" and "standard" foot. If made ot; metal it would contract an J ex pand by cold and heat, but it .would- be a "unit" and not a ts.?anlard." If the consent Of the commercial . world, but different countries enact by law differ ent "units." We have the "dollar," al so Canada, Liberia, Mexico an I New foundland. A large numbeF of Span ish American countries have. the "peso." England the "pound sterling." Germany the "mark," France the "franc," etc; and ail have the gold standard. ' If a country like India. China. Japan or Mexico uses silver, money almost exj clusively. they are on a silver basisi but iiave the gold standard, because all their silver money is valued and com pared with goM as the standard of all Tliere is no such thing known among civilized nations as a silver standard. . . i 1 n -. .1 Tlie law .ut 185.1 that prohbitcd the free coinage' of subsidiary silver was petitioned tor by the democratic legis- lature of New Jersey, passed by-a denvocratic congress, and signed by a democratic president. Franklin 1 lerce: and yet. the democratic party lays all the blame erf demonetizing so called) sdver to the republicans. Hiat law was passed to keep the silver coins in the country and made them legal tender at their face value. The great "crime of 1873" passed by the republicans was a FREE COIN- AGE-ACT, because it enacted that any one could eIcjosit silver bullion " and have it coined into trade dollars, The absurd cliim of the 16 to I cranks that .silver was demonetized in 1873 is a malicious lie. They forget their own acts in 185.V , The silver in a silver dollar in 1873 was worth three and one haf cent c.ff rllf Ju.C tt tt..lt,-1.t Cll 1 !. " . ' . , . "l " 'form of -an eighte-cii-vcar-o d g r . with a unit loot, but a long ways iron, a mf clmks 7l( j - t .standard fo.t measure,. ,.st sulficenlly tilted to give her Jn talking ol money renHmler stand- fo js, k.ok. Undotrldedl) the parhfr ard of valt-e is established by universal ... ... ; , ... ' ... J more than a gold eNdlar, and bullion -Miss Anita is attending the Emer brokers in New York were melting the son College, in Boston.! "where, in the silver dollars and selling the bullion company of other young girl- with back to the mint, anel making fortune, eternal entities, she Js studying oratory One broker admitted to the congress- as applied to anatomy and pedagogy, ional committee that his business aver- She is. at present on a lecture tour, i aged from $1,800,000 to $2,000,000 a 1 asked the young' philosopher to year. The United States mint was run- give me a sketch of her life. She said n;ng at a great expense coining silver she was born in Cleveland. Ohio, and dtdlars, and the people were paying the, at the age of eleven months went I to bill for the benefit of a lot oi money England with her parents. Then en sharks; yet some cranks call.it a crime sucel the teriod of the fennies and the to then stop the coinage of the dollar cane.: which brought with them the ertir daddies ncver;aw knowledge :of the infinite.. j We have millions of silver dollars '"Then we returned to this country." now that will not circulate because the said Miss Anita. "We were in Brook pcoplc will -not use them, yet' some, lyn for five years, j then -we went f to cranks are crying for : more silver. It New Haven, wherci my parent now is too heavy and cumbersome for large live. I took up the 'study oi metaphys-' transaction, and there is now in circu- ics with Frank Edgar Mason, of the lation all the country will absorb for Church of Individual Dominion, three change and small commercial ex- years ago. lint long before that I had changes. become a pshchic and evolved my 4wn It is claimed that free coinage of sir- philosophy. ' J .-.''" vcr will preduce a demand for silver "In my twelfth year, after a teller and raise the market-price of the bul- religious struggle. succeeded in rrtak- lion. That is absolutely false. If you ing up. a religion of my own. My fhe- take silver bullion to the mint the gov- oty is the application of philosophy to trnment simply cats it up into pieces - education and social reform and the in- and stamps it to certify to its weight and dividual life. ' . fineness and bands it all back to you. . "I represent the (new philosophy of You have as much silver a before, education," hc concluded. "When I and there is no demand created. lecture on education, kindergarten If the government used the silver to teachers tell me that my work is ex alloy steel to make armor plate, the actlv like Frocbel's, but 1 have never same as nickel is used, then there studied 'Froebcl." New York Herald. STANDARD. - ; - . '.-''- . --.-'-. 1 . 1H9M). . j would be a demand for silver because it would pass out ol vur hands into the arts. . ; . i The quantities of. silver; used for plating knives, spoons, lories, waicno etc.. make a demand for it. but cutting it into pieces and handing'! it lack. to you creates no uemanu. i ou wuimi nave to hunt up a customer, for U in order to dispose of it. j ' There is only one "money," anil etc are ajj representative "money, anj nu,st i. redeemed in i real r.ioney, that js QOUD. , " -' j- The claim that there is i not gold cn"S; to redeem all' other money - is absurd. It can be used over and over again. If a farmer has ljooo tmshel u. j.. i,,if .. .. .,..;. ...:,. oniv nne ovv GOLD DOLLAR will ,.,mr,!.. ri.nrrs..nt.itive dol lars by being usjed over and, over again. : The calamity howlers, and cyclones from Texas, who go around trying to scare tne timia wun meir. money pow - j T bugaln,, and W. the ignorant, with scare the timid with their, money pow the "crime o: i7J atisurititv. io h ior the purpose Of getting ,hVoflij. They they cannot carTy the state w.ttt he tree trade banner on their mast so they are liged to ! useM.me other scheme. Therefore they - have .adopted .the Nrce vomage ot -ilver at lO to J without the consent ot any other na- ti" as, 1 h7 "T- Usc the word FREE -so as to make the vot- prospered as no other nation on earth has ever prospered before, hh n cannot be the "crime of 1K73" that caused the to keip 111 office by howbng for niore money. '! I lt,at is all there is toj the money question office, office, 'ioll'icc. If it not fir ibr. ..rfi. i u-o n.nl.l 1, ; peace and happiness, ami tlu- ghost of tne money pti-wer; would never haunt the followers of the! -calamity howlers. Let evry intelligent voter be sure an,j v,Ct ar))j relegwte the agitalors t. 0bivion .where they 'belong. ' . . "-if ;F( F SI V Salem Mav liiS "!'." PLATO'S' . RiE I N'fOA R N AT 1 0 Nv Plato no doubt would have been pleased to. meet lli-4 reincarnation as I nu-t'her in a' boarding house al No. 61 Uyt street, -Brooklyn, yesterday. 111 tlje row will Ikv thronged, when Miss Ani t.i True-man- discourses on the knowli edire of thc:infim'le.j i j It was at the tender age of nine, while seated at the feet of her stern 'v im aged aunt in . Birmingham, l-lnglami. who taught her Puritan religion with a cane, that Miss Anita j first came ill touch with her soul. And while plac ing the piano with pennies on her fin gers she changed the form A her .re ligion from the orthodox jto the philos ophical. I ' '! ' j -,. I vr;, a:. . . i. . . . . of Xahhih she ' & cvtud- l7,nVTif 'iii d,-, h.Ugh 'Vc'5 C fe"1 ' " read Socrates. 1 l3to or Irnmanuel Kant, she speaks j.ke a metaphysical text book -of the theories of the wise men ef old am ,,e l,e)r." Miss Anita told me. 0f ,,c philosophy of all the ages, I re- aizc tj,at ani an eternal entity, not bound by the limitations! of human life -j wjsh (oe ah all round character," .J1c continued "When I lecture I fre- qncntly appear before 1 an audiervce without knowing what 1 am to speak about. They choose a subiect, ior me, and I discourse upon it.; because. Ieing in touch with my sond. I can sec all things .in.' spiritual' life." That the charming young authoress of "Philo-Seiphia" and "Aceoh; a Tale of the Soul's 'Experiences' Ah fife 'cantos, is really the reincarnation tf Pl.i- to. goes .-without eiuestion. for so it i guaranteed by Egbert Morse Chesley, professor ef philowphy anl ethics, who is struggling with metaphysical prb.-i lems in Boston. I