Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 12 April 1894 — Page 6

THE REPUBLICAN.

Publiihed by

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W. S. MONTGOMKBT.

QBEBN FIELD INDIANA

PLEADS "GUILTY."

Theodore P. Hanjhhy Ent«ra That Plea In the Indianapolis National Bank Case*

In the United States District Court at Indianapolis, Monday afternoon, Theodore P. Haughey, indictod for wrecking the Indianapolis National Bank, appeared before Judge Baker and entered a pica of "Guilty" to five counts as charged. Judge

{he

Jaker withheld sentence and continued bond at $10,000. The penalty attached by law to the crime i6 imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than five years. The plea of guilty was a groat eurprlso to the public. It has no significance relative t3 the other defendants, whose trials will be at once pro-

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THEODORE P. HAUGIIEY.

eeeded with. The story of the wrecking of the Indianapolis National is familiar to the public. The downfall of Mr. Ilaughoy is one of the most painful and deplorable incidents that have occurred in recent years. No man stood higher ane year ago In religious and financial :irclos, while his connection with the I. O 0. F. and as a personal friend of the late Vice President Colfax gave him an enviible and almost national ptominence. Mr. Haughey is now sixty-five, and in all probability will end his days behind the steel-barred windows of the Michigan City penitentiary. The only escape is by ieath or by a Presidential pardon.

TILLMAN vs. CLEVELAND.

Says the Governor of .South Carolina t® the Public.

Gov. Tillman in an interview at Columbia, S. C„ Monday, denied that he was a Populist and stated that In wa3 a Simonpure Jeffcrsonian Democrat. lie remarked that he despised Cleveland and the Mugwumps said that Cleveland had destroyed the Democratic party thattho South and West must unite against tho eastern gold bugs and shylocks. In conclusion he said:

If the silver Congressmen will issuo a sail for a silver convention and carry the war into Africa we will teach those bloodsucking gold thieves a lesson in politics such as they have not had since Jackson's campaign against the banks. The farmers of the South and West will move onward in a solid body and demand legislation that will give them relief from the grinding poverty produced by six-cent cotton and thirty-cent wheat.

A' i' gmhsm

I'ATKICK WALSH,

|he new Senator from Georgia, recently ippointedby Governor Northen to succeed Senator Colquitt, deceased.

A DREADFUL CASUALTY.

Kine Firemen L,o :e Their Lirca In a Milwaukee Fire.

The Davidson theater at Milwaukee iras destroyed by fire, Monday morning. LtS o'clock the conflagration appeared to (e under control, but tho roof suddenly jave way and at least twenty firemen were precipitated to the floor of tha auditorium. The flames again broke out. Boveral are known to have been literally roasted aMve. They could not be rescued. As nearly as is known eight or nine fireBen lost their lives in the lire. The work rescuing the bodies of the killed and the men who were not killed began imnediatcly after the roof foil. William Crowley remained in tho ruins alive for fcours and his comrades put forth tremcnlous exertions to save him. There was Ire all around him and the spot where he iras pinned down was kept flooded. At 12:15 Fireman Crowley was released from Ihe ruins and taken to the Emergency Hospital, lie is badly hurt and may die.

STATE or OHIO,CITY OF TOLEDO, I.UCAS COUNTY, j"BaFRANK .T. CHUNKY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the Arm of F. J.C HENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo County and Stale aforesaid, and that said man •wili pay tho sum of ONE HCJNDKED DOLjAIiS i'or each cnil every case of CATAHKH that cannot, HE cured by the use of HALL'S CAJ'AKUIL CUUK.

FRANK J. CHENEY.

Sworn to before mc and subscribed in my presence, this Oth day of December, A. D. l&M A. W. GL.EASON, I

Kr:'vij

Notary Public.

Hall's at.arrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaced lif the system. Send for testimouirls, free.

F, J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.

f^"Sold by Druggists, 70c,

..

*2®

The Stranger Within the Gates.

Oood Advice From One Who Knows Whereof He Speaks—Dr. Talmago's Sormon.

At the Brooklyn Tabernacle, Sunday, Dr. Talmage preached to a large audience from the text, Matthew xxv, 35—"I was a stranger, and ye took mc in." He said:

It is a moral disaster that jocosity has despoiled so many passages of scripture, and my text is one that has suffered by irreverent and misapplied quotation. It shows great poverty of wit and humor when people take the sword of divine truth for a game at fencing or chip off from the Ivohinoor diamond of inspiration a sparkle to decorate a fool's cap. Mv text is the salutation in the last judgment to be given to those who have shown hospitality and kindness and Christian helpfulness to strangers.

There have glided into this house those unknown to others, whose history. if told, would be more thrilling than the deepest tragedy, more exciting than Patti's song, more bright than a spring morning, more awful than a wintry midnight. If they could stand up here and tell the story of their escapes, and their temptations, and their bereavements. and their disasters, and their victories, and their defeats, there would be in this house such a commingling of groans and acclamations as would make the place unendurable.

There is a man who, in infancy, lay in a cradle satin lined. Out yonder is a man who was picked up, a foundling. on Boston Common. Here is a man who is coolly observing this religious service, expecting no advantage and caring for no advantage for himself, while yonder is a man who has been for ten years in an awful conflagration of evil habits, and he is a mere cinder of a destroyed nature, and he is wondering if there shall be in this service any escape or help for this immortal soul. Meeting you only once perhaps face to face" I strike hands with you in an earnest talk about your present condition and 3rour eternal well being. St. Paul's ship at Melita went to pieces where two seas meet, but we stand today at a point where a thousand seas converge, and eternity alone car. tell the issue of the hour.

A walk through Broadway at 8 D'clock at night is interesting, educating, fascinating, appalling, exfoliating to the last degree. Stop in front of that theater and see who ijoes in. Stop at that saloon and pee who comes out. See the great tides of life surging backward and forward and beating against the marble of* the curbstone and eddying down into the saloons. What is that marlc on the face of that debauchee? It is the hectic flush of eternal death. What is that woman's laughter? It is the shriek of a lost soul,

Who is that Christian man going along with a vial of anodyne to the dying pauper on Elm street? Who is that belated man on the way to a prayer meeting? Who is that city missionary going to take a box in wlrch to bury a child? Who are all these clusters of bright and beautiful faces? They are going to some interesting place of amusement. Who is that man :lrug store? That yesterday lost all Wall street. He is dose of belladonna, and before morn-, ing it will make no difference to him whether stocks are up or down. I tell you that Broadway, between 7 and 12 o'clock at night, between the Battery and Central park, is an Austerlitz, a Gettysburg, a Waterloo. where kingdoms are lost or wo i, and three worlds mingle in the strife.

going into the is tho. man who his fortune on going in for a

I meet another coming down off the hotel steps, and I say, "Where are you going?" You sav, "I am going with a merchant of New York who has promised to show me the. underground life of the city. I am his customer, and he is going to oblige me very much." Stop! A business house that tries to get or keep your custom through such a process as that is not worthy of you. There are business establishments in our cities which have for years been sencing to destruction hundreds and thousands of merchants. They have a secret drawer in the counter where money is kept, and the clerk goes and gets it when he wants to tal*e these visitors to the city through the low slums of the place.

When one of these western merchants has been dragged by one of those commercial agents through the slums of the city he is not fit to go home. The mere memory of what he has seen will be moral pollution. I think you had better let the city missionary and the police attend to the exploration of New York and underground life. You do not go to a small pox hospital for the purpose of exploration. You do not go there, because you are afraid of contagion.

About sixteen years ago as a minister of religion I felt I had a divine commission to explore the iniquities of our cities. I did not ask counsel of my session, or my presbytery, or of the newspapers, but asking the companionship of three prominent city police officials and of two of the elders of my church I unrolled my commission and it said: "'Son of man, dig into the wall, and when I had digged into the wall behold a door, and he said, go in and see the wicked abominations that are done here, and I went in and saw and behold!"

Just as in the sickly season you sometimes hear the bell at the gate of the cemetery ringing almost in-

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cessantly. so I found that the bell at the gate of the cemetery where ruined souls are buried was tolling by day and tolling by night. I said: "I will explore." I went as a physician goes into a fever lazaretto, to see what practical and useful information I might get. That would be a foolish doctor who would stand outside the door of an invalid writing a Latin prescription. When a lecturer in a medical college is done with his lecture he takes the students into the dissecting room and shows them the reality. 1 went in and saw and came forth to my pulpit to report a plague and to tell how sin 'dissects the bod}*, and dissects the mind and dissects the soul.

Now I, as an officer in the army of Jesus Christ, went on that exploration and onto that battlefield. If you bear a like commission, go if not, stay away. But you say. "Don't you think that somehow the description of those places induces people to go and see for themselves.?" I answer, yes, just as much as the description of yellow fever in some scourged city would induce people to go down there and ret the pestilence. But I may be addressing some stranger already destroyed. Where is he. that |I may pointedly vet kindly address him? Come back and wash in the deep fountain of a Saviour's mercy.

A young man comes in from the country bragging that nothing can do him any harm. He knows about all the tricks of city life. "Why," he says, "did not I receive a circular in the country telling me that somehow they had found out I was a sharp business man, and if I would only send a certain amount of money by moil or express, charges prepaid, they iuld send a package with which 1 could make a fortune in two months, but I did not believe it. My neighbors did, but I did not. Wh}% no man could take my money. I carry it in a pocket inside my vest. No man could take it. No man could cheat me at the faro table. Don't I know all about the 'cue-box' and the dealer's box, and the cards stuck together as though they were one, and when to hand my checks? Oh, they can't cheat me. I know what I am about," while at the same time, that very moment, such men are succumbing to the worst satanic influences in the simple fact that they are going to observe. Now, if a man or woman shall go down into a haunt of iniquity for the purpose of reforming men and women, or for the sake of being able intelligently to warn petple against such perils if, as did John Howard or Elizabeth Fry or Thomas Chalmers, they go down among the abandoned for the sake of saving them, then such explorers shall be God protected, and they will come out better than when they went in. But if you go on this work of exploration merely for the purpose of satisfying a morbid curiosity I will take 20 per cent, off your moral character.

Sabbath morning comes. You wake up in the hotel. You have had a longer sleep than usual. You say: "Where am I?" A thousand miles from home? I have no family to take to church to-day. My pastor will not expect my presence. think 1 shall look over my accounts and study my memorandum book. Then I write a few business letters and talk to that merchant who came in on the same train with me." Stop! You cannot afford to do it. "But," you say, "I am worth $300,000." You cannot afford to do it. You say, "I am worth $1,000,000." You cannot afford to do it. All you ga:n by breaking the Sabbath you will lose. You will lose one of three things—your intellect, your morals, or .your property—and you cannot point in the whole earth to a single exception to this rule. God gives us six days and keeps one for Himself. Now, if we try to get the seventh, He will upset the work of all the other six.

I remember going up Mt. Washington, before the railroad had been built, to the Tip-Top house, and the guide would come around to our horses and stop us when we were crossing a very steep and dangerous place, and he would tighten the girth of the horse and straighten the saddle. And I have to tell you that this road of life is so steep and full of peril we must at least one day in seven stop and have the harness of life adjusted and our souls reequipped.

How few men there are who know how to keep the Lord's day away from home! A great many who are consistent on the banks of the St. Lawrence, or the Alabama, or the Mississippi are not so consistent when they get so far off as the East river. I repeat—though it is putting it on low ground—you cannot financially afford to break the Lord's day. It is only another way of tearing up your government securities and puttincr down the price of goods and blowing up ybur store.

Oh, strangers, welcome to the great city. May you find Christ here, and not any physical or moral danger. Men coming from inland, from distant cities, have found God and found Him in your service. May that be your case to-day. You thought you were brought to this place merely for the purpose of sight-seeing. Perhaps God brought you to this roaring city for the purpose of working out your eternal salvation. Go back to your homes and tell them how Ave met Christ here—the loving, patient, pardoning and sympathetic Christ. Who knows but tiie city which has been the destruction of so many may be your eternal redemption?

A good many years ago Edward Stanley, the English commander, with his regiment took a fort. The fort was manned by some Span-

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iards. Stanley came close up to the fort, leaving his men, when a Spaniard thrust at him with a spear, intending to destroy his life, but Stanley caught hold of the spear, and the Spaniard, in attempting to jerk the spear away from Stanley, lifted him up into the battlements. No sooner had Stanley taken his position on the battlements than he swung his sword, and his whole regiment leaped after him. and the fort was taken. So it may be with you, O stranger. The city influences which have destroyed so many and dashed them down forever shall be the means of lifting you up into the tower of God's mercy and strength, your sou! more than conqueror through the grace of Him who has promised an especial benediction to those who shall treat you well, sayj ing, "I was a stranger, and ye took me in."

IJiNClE SAK IS RICH.

Property Valuation in 1890 Itcachcd a Total of $05,(KS1,091,15)7— Indiana's Share.

Washington Special Indianapolis Jonrnd April 2.

A bulletin has just been issued b,7 the Census Bureau giving interest' ing figures of The wealth of tin' United States. The total true valuation of tho reai and personal proporty in the country at the close the census period, L890. amounted to §65,037,091,197, of which amounl $39,544,333 represents the value ol real estate ar.d improvements thereon and #25,492,54u,SG4 that of personal property, including railroads, mines and quarries. At the sum'! time the total assessed value of real and personal property taxed wai §25,437,173,418, of which amouni $18,840,550,075 represented real es» tate and improvements thereon and $0,516,010,743 personal property. The true valuation of property for 1890is classified as follows: IZeal estate, with improvements thereon s?89.iill .51 (1 Live stock on farms and ranges, farm implements and machinery Mines and quarries, ineludin ,' product oil hand Gold and silver coin and bullion... Machinery of mills and product on hand, raw and manufactured Kailroads and equipments, including $2*5.898.519street railroads... Telegraphs, telephones, shipping and canals Miscellaneous

2.70:5,015,OH

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1.15S.77-1 SM, I

1,058,58:1

.141

!. (585,407

701.755.713 •0 l.70S.it2!

Total f65.0S7.091.197

The figures for Indiana being now nearly four years old, are of interest principally for purposes of comparison. with other States. The total valuation of all property in the State as returned in 1890 was £2,095,170,026, divided up as follows: Real estate, with improvements

thereon S l.W.l *5.737 Live stock on farms, etc 1U.5 7 Mines and quarries 15.iai.-KU) Uold and sitver coin and bullion... 35,510.877 Machinery of mills and product on hand 54.920.912 Railroads and railways 310,172.141 Telegraphs, telephones, shipping and canals 0.117. IfiC Miscellaneous 207,525.01

Indiana, with her $2,095,176,626 of property, stands tenth in the family of States. New York stands at the head of the list with $8,576,701,991. Then follows Pennsylvania with nearly $6,200,000,000, Illinois with $5,000.009,000 and Ohio with nearly $4.000,000,000. Her remaining rivals are Massachusetts with $2,800,009, California with £2,533,000, Missouri with £2,39/.000, Iowa with $2,287,000,000, Texas with £2,105, 576,766, Michigan presses Indiana closely.as she is worth £2,095,016,272.

It is a striking fact that in the amount of gold and silver coin and bullion, Indiana'surpasses California, the El Dorado, by about £3.000,000. from which it may be inferred that the old coffee-pot and rural sock, are still popular in the Hoosier State. In the value of real estate and improvements, Indiana stands eighth, being exceeded only by New York, Pennsylvania. Illinois. Massachusetts, Ohio, California and Missouri.

The growth of the wealth of the State is best shown by the fact that in 1850 the total valuation of real and personal pronertv was £202,050,204: in If 60. £528,V,35,38] in 1870, £1,208,180,54 5: in 1880, £1,081.000.000 in 1890, $2,095,170,026. The per capita valuation rose from £205 in 1850 to $950 in 1890.

Good Roads Without Stones. Colman's Rural World. The advantage of properly built and well maintained dirt roads seems to have been largely overlooked in the movement for the improvement of our country roads, and it has been said, with some reason, that the movement in favor of good roads has been hampered to some extent by a somewhat too enthusiastic advocacy of broken stone roads, either macadam or telford. The cost of such stone roads is absolutely prohibitive of their adoption in many parts ol the country where, perhaps, improved roads are urgently needed.

Comparatively little is said about dirt roads in the discussion on improved construction, but it is certain that very excellent roads may b« made of earth by a proper system ol construction. Both surface drainage and sub-drainage are essential in obtaining a durable road, and intelligent maintenance is another essential, which latter is rather dillicull to insure.

The mere dumping of piles of eartl: in wet spots or low places is nol maintenance, but is a waste of energy due to carelessness or misdirected zeal- With a good dirt road onco completed, it would probably bf found economical and advantageous to intrust its maintenance to a few skilled and intelligent men paid foi their services, instead of leaving the maintenance to the spasmodic attention of the farmers and their hirec men.

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THE CAMPAIGN.

Looks Like It "Will be a JugHandle Affair.

The Republican Year.

.inlianapolis Journal.

"I do not believe that the politi?ians fully appreciate the situation in this State,"' said a Republican sv'nose business takes him among the people in the manufacturing towns. "They cannot unless they go among the people, and particularly wageearners in all lines. There has been a revolution in sentiment. I everywhere meet men who voted for Cleveland two years ago who are anxious for the day to come when they can vote for a Republican candidate for Congress. Every day I meet men who declare that they have cast their last Democratic vote --not one here and there, but many. If men openly make such declarations, what will hundreds of the silent men do in the privacy of the voting booths? I have put the Republican plurality in Indiana at 30,009, and every day confirms me in the opinion that it will reach that figure. You know that I was not a hopeful Republican in 1892, and it was because I mingled with the same people who are now so decidedly heading toward the Republican party, and then they were in doubt. Then they were listening to theories now they know. The man whose wages have been reduced from $1.50 to £1 a day is in no frame of mind to be treated with more theories. He has just two which are that under Republican rule, and that has lost one-third of his waires and full employment, under Democratic rule. lie will stay Republican until he gets his wages back. No, I will not put the Republican plurality in Indiana less than 30.009. Nor would you if you could hear what I hear on my trips."

These questions were followed by opinions to the effect that a pension is a contract. Then, in black type. came the sentence: "No pensioner need have any fear that his pension will be taken away." To make assurance doubly sure. the final declaration is made in these words: "A pension is a contract, and because thereof, during life, a vested

riinit. N Tho countrv is

sai'e— the pensinner Cleveland." With this circular in hand active Democrats in nearly every township in Indiana saw and convineed every

Change In Hawaiian Policy. Chicago Inter-Occan. The news from Washington is cheering. President Cleveland has learned that there is an American sentiment that demands effort on the part of the administration for the pf

facts his mind, station and port of

How Veterans Were Cheated. Indianapolis Journal. At the time of the National Encampment of the Grand Army in Washington, in September. 1892, the Democratic outlook was disheart- nig d?lav ening. It was there ascertained that the bulk of the veterans in the North were in the Harrison column and that thousands of veterans who had been Democrats were likely to vote for Harrison. What could be clone? That was a question which a few Democratic politicians, some of whom were veterans, wrestled with in a secret meeting during the Encampment. As the result, it was agreed that a secret personal effort was to be made to bring Democratic veterans back into the Cleveland line. A movement was made to organize a "'Veterans' Tariff Reform League."' Circulars were sent out from a New York headquarters, in one of which there was a headline, "The Right to Pensions in Regarded as a Contract." In one of these circulars the following questions were put in bold type. "Can the Government, if it desires, repudiate the right to a pension? Can the payment of a pension be avoided? Are they not in the nature of a contract between tho people and the pensioner, which continues during the life of the beneficiary?"

protection of the American interests in all parts of the world. It is one of the very many inconsistencies of President Cleveland tln.t while he is so ignorant of the trade and commerce of the United States as to talk about "our narrow home market," which is the best and largest market of the world, and to advise neglect of it while undertaking the quest of markets with poverty-stricken Asiatics, he has been the most neglectful of all Presidents in maintaining the only means bv which the foreign markets which he covets can be gained.

We had a favorable commercial treaty with Hawaii under Mr. Cleveland's administration it is ordained that this treaty shall be abrogated. We had favorable commercial agreements with Germany, France, Italy. Brazil. Cuba: under Mr. Cleveland's administration it is ordained that they they shall be set aside. "Lose what you have, and try to get something of less value" seems to be the Bomocratic policy, both as to home and to foreign trade. "Foreign commerce is carried in ocean-going ships: the Democratic policy denies the United States a merchant marine by which foreign goods may be imported to and domestic goods exijorted from this country. A merchant marine needs coaling places and harbors of refuge. The Democratic policy has been to neglect to acquire control of new harbors in foreign lanrls and relinquish those that have been acquired during Republican administration.

This country had gained a coaling

refuge

he had full wages j-Tfli-'0or in the Hawaiian Islands. Mr. Cleveland, after doing all that he could to provoke a quarrel with the Hawaiian government, which had it come to pass, would have lost to us control of this valuable property, has been compelled by stress of public opinion to change his policy. A large sum is to be soent at once upon works at Pearl Harbor. with a view of making it in fact as well as in name a port under protection of the United States. The

at Pearl

President has been for twelve months past in possession of funds for the beginning of this important work. in orderinsr its expenditure already has resulted in loss to trade, and may have led toward political complications that rnav cloud our title to the harbor. But as it is never too late to begin to do well we commend President Cleveland's tardv resolution to complete the work so wisely begun by President Harrison.

Senator Morgan's scheme for a tariff commission would undoubtedly settle the tariff question—on a protection-to-trusts basis. —Sentinel.

We do not credit the report that President Cleveland is satisfied with the Senate tariff bill. President Cleveland is a tariff reformer.—Sentinel.

WIIAT A FIRST-CLASS BA11N IS.

Tjcvi P. Morton's New One on His lihinebeck Farm.

New York Herald.

too—with Mr,

Ex-Vice-President Morton has restored the barn on his Rhinebeck farm, that was burned last summer. The building is three hundred feet long, sixtv-five feet wide, and where the silos are located eighty-nine feet wide. The latest improvements have been introduced in the building and no expense has been spared to make it a model barn and one of the finest in this country.

Railroad tracks for cars to carry feed run around the interior of the barn: there are blinds on every window, so arranged as to act as awnings to keep the heat out in summer.

The

veteran of Democratic an- wall with chestnut sleepers to rest wavering tecedents that Mr. Cleveland was, in fact, as staunch a friend of the pensioner and the veteran as was General Harrison. By this means several thousand votes were secured for Mr. Cleveland. Mr, Cleveland permitted these representations to be made, and then, when he came to select members of his cabinet he fell upon a sectional and natural foe of the Union soldier for the department in which is the Pension Bureau. One of the first acts of Secretary Hoke Smith was to repudiate the theory that a pension is a contract by assuming, in an executive prder. that all of 300,000 pensions, under the*act of June 27, 1890, were illegal and void, and to set aboard selected 'for the object to review them for the purpose of suspension. Commissioner Lochren has informed the House that a pension is not a contract, and if the country had not rebuked the suspension of pensioners it would not have ceased when thirteen thousand had been dropped but would have gone on until the larger part of the 300,000 had been cut off. In this State, by far the larger part of those pensioned under the law of 1890 were Democrats, because Democratic Congressmen pushed their claims, consequently two-thirds of those dropped are men who voted for Mr. Cleveland. Democratic Congressmen may restore them, but they cannot again fool Indiana veterans as in 1892.

area walls outside of tho have a six-inch blue-stone with an iron railing live feet

build in coping,

high. The basement is of concrete live feet thick, with a cross brick

upon, and drainage under the whole. The basement under the L, which is 40x00 feet in size, is fitted up as a root cellar. The silos are three in number and hold fifteen hundred tons.

The stalls in the barn are provided with fire escape fasteners, so that any one or all of them can be opened

The many new inventions introduced in the construction of this barn are being closely observed by experts.

Father Times' New Equipment, William Henry Bishop in April Century. Torringford, bustling with foundries, cott.onmills, skate-shops.need-le-shops, and hook-and-eye-shops— shops, not factories, they are called in the local nomenclature—was one of the water-power villages that the new distribution of power by tho railroad had made, just as Bakerville and Riverton were of those that it had harmed. I was told that at Riverton you could buy for £2.000 an excellent scythe-factory that had cost £7,000. But, indeed, even apart from the railroad, the scythe is disappearing before the advance of the mowing machine. It will become an obsolete implement, and we shall have old Father Time mounted on a mowing machine' and consulting a Waterbury watch instead of an eyeglass.

1

at once- Three hundred thermostats are placed in the barn to give an alarm in case of tire. They tell what part of the building is on fire, and are connected with the farmhouse and office.

The barn is lighted by incandescent lights. The latest improved machinery is provided for grinding feed, ctc.^ including a powerful, en-., gine.