Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 12, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 November 1896 — Page 1

Weekly (EW ief

(iL. 19.

JASPER, INDIANA. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER V, 896.

NO. 12.

, e I, lll KP KVKKV KKIPAV, AT JASpr .k. DDWMtooojnr, imuana, iy CLEMENT DOAN1. OFFICE. I n Ooram Büilww ,, W'K-r Sixth Stkkkt. PRICE OF BtTBSCRfpTION. (N r War, 2 NuiiiIhth, Postpaiil, fl..r0.

! V ritten fur the Jai r 01 tm.K WHAT IS SIN? B Lady i ook, 999 Thmnn G ( laOls. In that little work by Hobbe CM the "Common Lawi of England,"

vbich Um great Cassendui kissed wIk ii bi bad read, laying, "T b

,rlT time in rorti.in. i; iTEfl r rVDVEBTISIKG. Kor icgal advertisements lejfitl raten IQ lines II.'"1 'r first insert iuii ; .rOe each huI j u-ii t itieert in. ,r yearly advertisement libwal con

tmcti ticer.

will be mad to okular idver

QOMMKRCI iL AND JOB WORK of ill K nul Promptly ami Neatly ex HsstH :ii " ihkri. nucne. IVf invite inspection anl business. 7i7ori:ssioN.L CARDs!

i.u. K. KKMI'K. DK. K. M. MI

Drs. Kempf & Mueller JASPER. INDIANA. i i H i hoi M -Da umä KtgM. Apr I IT, h. 1y.

FRANK FINK, JUSTICE OF Tili: PEACE,

JASPER, INDIANA. SiHwial attention riven t collet

g m lions, tnd prompt returns. ( oni-mi--i-n expires Nov. 17. 1S08. yilffli'i- at lh 0..r Ifoun.. I'.- " .

treatise indeed -mall in lulk, hut in my judgment the very marrow oi of science, " tin' hfalmesbury phil osopher sayn ol -in: "All crimes arc Indeed line, but not all linr crimes. A tin may bt In lb thought or wo ret purpose ol man. of which neither I judge, nor l witness, nor any man can take notice; but a crime is such a sin a

consists in an action against the law. it which action be can be sec used, tnd tried by a judge, ami he eon viet ed or chared by witnesses, farther, that which is no sin in it -elf, but indifferent, may be made -in by a p. isitive law. ' ' We labor under a multitude ol

KM Kit. ms ol th9 last description. Man kind ha- fabricated them without

number. As "The Preacher" said long centuriei ago; "God hath made man Upright ; but they sought out many inventions." Politicians have been very guilty in this re

spect, but toe prteeu ot an igee

have been the chiet delinquents

And they have so blind

ment and warped the consciences t i i .i ... i..

Ol niaiiKimi mat conipaiaio nv ie are able to distinguish at all times what really is or is not sin, or in what way an act truly becomes sin

ful. From tens of thousands ot ouloiti theologians thunder forth

their hebdomadal denunciations against sinner-. and terrify their bearers with imaginary crimes and fictitious punishments. Things

'indmerent in themselves are

Ii d

those of most consequence are di

ned to a vanishing point, un-

C0UNTIE8.

he come- short of these to himself, -o far will be hurt or wrong other-, tod -o far will he be wanting in a due appreciation of his Maker. ' To thine own Helf be true, And it must foll.iv, as tin lay the night, Then esaet not then bs fafse to uny IIIHII." Boeing that I man's nature is, threefold- physical, intellectual , ami moral ; that the first is the basis of the second, und the second of the third; it becomes his duty to studv

and inform himself of each in its or-;

ler, and to -eck the highest develop ment of them all. We cannot be perfect, and so we cannot lie sinless,

but we can aim at the greatest pos-

iiile perfectibility, which involves

the minimising of sin, and this is our bounden OUtV. Our bodies are

not sinful, although we may make

them instruments t sin. So far as

we know they are the perfection of Clay

iod 's phvieul handiwork. Those l,nt,n ,

are false to Nature, traitors to hu- f) : '

men dignity, and slanderers of the Dearliorn

Most High-blind leaders of the Decatur

Mind who assert that there is in ID them anything obscene or unclean. i)lltKljH From the germs of life to the Elkhart moment of death they are beautiful- Fayette ly and wonderfully made. WKuitain should cherish and preserve them L rlnHin

f.. ii.. i : ..ii .

t i eirem iv hi nr i imr ii' i s i... .....

I'll the Hltlg- . . I9 . . . , wm

in just in' a.-on , im ; 1 1 i o i u oiii ot-i in- in'-"" tellect tial faculties to the work, bv a ant ..j r .1 . i :1 dreene

careiin snniv 01 ineir ngiiti lunvtiuui HhiiiüI

INDIANA OFFICIAL VOTE.

HABITS OF THOUGHT. "Why did you buy that piece of

Increiw of 82.JJ0 Over Thit of IM2. land?' asked the wife. limiuMua Ro. n; -Th 1-. f1 "Pwause I want to start a brick-

the county canvaHHirut vara. plenüia clay makes spien-

t lie teil uu- of

toarl arrived at the Secretary of State ti'.A hrirk

oltice to-lav anl the following ttfruren "VVhv does it

therefore otlicial :

such nice

2.3 I s

- r -. 3 D 3

Auaiua Allen Hartholoinew Beaton Hlaekfonl Him me Brown ( 'arroll Cans Clark

oil

R. M. KtUVaS, M. A. ItWKXKY. lttorneys at Law, JAHPEH, IIVI.,

s HjnasMM in the c..iirt .( imi...i anil magnified to huge important

I) UK oiintii-M. I'm I le ii 1 ur allein i Ii Ki i mi i. i-oflectiotu. tiw' I i Ii K .l-koii Ht,. oppoHlt II. mini

y ' ' til at length truth and falsehood an

coiitounded. Those, too, who

and requirements, sna iuhkii g iiHncock body and mind assist in the pro-' Harriwm duction of moral soellence. It is Hendricks not in artificial laws that progress uwr;r). must be sought, but in observing n,,tjngton and utilizing natural laws. What-Jackson ever opposes Nature, opposes (ioil1HHPer

'and humanity, for nature is (hkI I jenen,on revealed to nan. Nature i- the , j,.nMint?s true Hook of Kevelation. Nor is it in 'Johnson RhHih nr mMmMti. in ohserv-! Knox

: I 4i .:... a Kos-iusko

um oi uegiwuno i iie.monies, in accepting

i 4 j . A 4 i tin VA I

riwu mm i ., ..

or refusing Lttke

W. E. COX,

i i iitiiiif Att

Circuit, IMl w nrvtully iitteml to uny I v 1 1 iNwineM eiitriKletl U Km in any county ol Mi ' renit. tii in Rnayd'i Miiiiinf om PablVe s(1imri Hi r. , "W-lV

W . Ilui.tar.

. I . nr. , . il f'.lllkC i,r ttl'li IV. I .ii....!..

t.l.i Willi iri ""f-"1"' ' iu.v.i.-, v .v.- ..v

.t ;.,.,......, ,.f t.a . 'I, ii vfi. !.. r aie saniis uuen. ma 111 vumm

III! lll'-l II 1 I il III '! Ml- V. Ill, , I . . . a , f . ., 1 .i. tnir or corruiitinir our lnlsirn iacu'-

. fl aw oi Mil, ai'- iii'i.-' ii m i. .i wii ni - . - . . . . ItnnnnTr T.9 TUT. t i:i.i : ties and natural instincts, we do

- 7 -in- in uiliers inosi Kiun ami t o n- 1 l JAHI'KU INDIANA, usly. To omit minor offences. t(' ;"ir f !li ,s,n . i t .. aeamst ourselves. Immoral lndul-

I'l lit 1 1IU Attorney I"r I lie I II II .liuiu-ll.ie IICUI III UlUVU li iuj-uuiv, - . . , i

, .. i 4 i i uence vuuiies our inorai ta.-ie aim

I -in against nou. v are wiu,". . ... i . , ...iVi ,.,.r K..w,.re ,.f , . then our moral ret t itude j belief in

Imt we rarc.lv if ever, hear a man 'nifest improbabil.tes, no matter

warned not to sin against himself . jon ow hjgh authority produces ir-j i... ; 'intellectual obhouity. I hose who

i t'i i 1 1 1 hm in i ua mo. ... um Fiir- . ... i I ical impossibilitv. whereas the latter J"Ie themselves into a belief that

mree ones make one, may easily

W. A. Tryli.

TRAY LOR & HUNTER, Attorneys at Law,

.lANI'Klt. INDIANA,

nnpoi

is of constant and universal occurrence. Now, if there is no sin against (iod, a good mnnv ideas are

I i j i . I :t . .

v ill practice In tin-Court of Inn... i mi. i at once exjuoiieu; aim n sin against

4).. IIIIIKCillltl.. .,,,,.1... ..Kvmivw t.lLillir n ;.,. it

1,-iiffliT ...r liul.oiK rounty stut. Hunk j- is i ,

v, i . -wa.

BBUHO BUCTTNEB,

rrv

behooves us to look into the mutPr

Etymologists are not halfst sure a- the theoloinans as to what sin

Attorney at LawJ:1';111"1;, Two 7 of the word have been suggested bv And NotHry IMibllc, various learned men: from the IASPRR, irvri.vrNA, Greek "sinein," to hurt, and from

praetfM i the Court of liul.oi am! uie iiciiii.iu bhiibii, i" U "'" I

..untie, laaiana. Jim. p, i"'. ,,r poMtbty it IS allied to the Anglo-

naxon synanan, to go saunaer. riien fore it means to hurt, or some

thing to be atoned for, or to go wrong and thus to do w rong. Our readers can select which they please ; we prefer the first because

v iHi UMH Mtbikl of fttttag trtlftctal tth i 1 tVu, nmnkui nf cutimrelieiisioii k K.ir.ii.-i i. mm. iir. M. OStevjU is me si in pit si oi tompri ntnsion nn aii.t Lurry' Hr.lr tur. aildis Hot tainted l)V priestCNlft.

Uf -t U. lHM-ly.

F. E. WOODS, D. D. S ,

OPERATIVE DENTIST, JASPER, " INDIANA. a oo er of tecth. to.oo

U Cr.iwn anil SrMc w..rk U..I.I Killlnif

learn to think that two times two make tive. Ah with the mind, so

with the ImhIv. If we debase it to

iinwo-thy use-, we sin against the Inundation of our b eine. These

lives of ours, so short, hut so pregnant ol good or evil, on which each

New Year makes so large an inroad,

are not alone to eat and drink, to marry and cive in marriage, but to

develops to their utmost every facultyof our being; to inarch in order and harmony .18 the soldiers of progress, making every advantage won fniui error and falsehood a step towards the general advanct ment of humanity. Mortality is for the individual, but immortality for the race, and the quality of the ever-living line moat depend upon the sum of the qualities of the individual units. If

-J. 5. STEWART,

is ansoiuieiv mi

as (iod is concerned we can do him neither good nor evil. We cannot sin against Him, therefore. Hut

we can do injury to ourselves or to

. .i.M,f public sunare. spy.i mock. ,,(!.,; and if we look a little farlAM'KK, - - INDIANA ther. we shall see that we cannot

'i crutions tirtft-elans nf recommended even sin against others unless we

RESIDENT DENTIST.

Now we cannot hurt or injure " v 'V i.. ii;... ., Hi. 'lves, the race will be stronger,

' I M( if ' I p I I IUI till V li'ut, AMICf , . . f nature forbids it. What ever false " and belter fn.ni age to age st,,, we take leads onlv ourselves "r happiness will be a guarante,

.. i id greater happiness to those who

astrav. w u;u ever wrong we no . , i l .... vi'7, i J come after, bet those who wil can never be undone. We may do, . , , , , i , i , . m grovel and burrow, crawl and sinua new right, lut cannot recall a " .tl , , , ' , , i ..t .... -.,i ,.v. .;..; .. J,t,. Wlt" heads low and hearts in t.ut wriiiit' s i that n oral exm.'it on . ' .....

r". ... ' tin. .1 1 t it is fur rill tMtl unolu f.i

I I... 1.. : .1.1.. W . . 4.. Ml. v..-, , .... ' . v . ,.v,,.- ...

S al)-OUHC IUI IOSMUH-. ruß IUI , . .., t

inarcn as iiie oesi can wnn ioreheads to the stars though with feet Ion eaith. Let those who will plague

themselves and others with suppositious sins, it is for us to AO steadily onw ard, brushing aside the meta

physical cobwebs of theologians and

Specialist on have first pinned against ourselves

The impulse which urges me to hurt or wrong my neighbor is be

forehand a wrong or hurt to my own nature. If this be true, as it umjuestion ably is, what then should be the duty of our "pastors and masters?" First to apply the maxim of the old Creek sage: "Know thyself."

from -tart to finish, frun embryo to

liniditv. Next, to point ollt l)tW

i i... bit profmaloBal crvice to nil ,i "i, ,..),! abstain from iniurv to

work in the ileiitul line, ntl " . . I if . u hi ci...t attention, himself, and, paradoxical as it niiiv

appear, this would become equivalent to "Love thyself." This is the first and chief duty ot malt tO love himself, to cherish

himself, to reverence and worship his own being. When he shall have succeeded in doing Urft, la will love others; he will love.

reverence, and worship ms lenowbeings; he will intensely worship and reverence his (toil. So far as

-:U work guaranteed, views and Bridge work. 6. y.

I) EXT I ST It Y iff lr. H. A. MOSHY Resident Dentist,

HtJNTINOUUlt, IND.

""I.1IK it Ii Pf'.llll MM to

I I'lnte work pecll!y olit itol, met .ti '- i. irrmit. il. Apr. 1. 'W. Hlnhriigv lUMlialilp ai u. (! Notiro. The ti'idertiiKneil, l run tec StW- ' I All-llll )llh,,iH .-. ,111.1 V Ill III-

tell. I to low tlllli hilHiiieMt. on MMtliftlat

. evn mmak, mi riHuk ltU's wffkv uu E"1 N '"el. U'taet-n I ihil. Mini ""li. in Jksper. the Tvwiialiii U 'r in I udiana HHtnol lu,kH hi ntme " v i i.i.i a m Bauaaa, Tinsns Ag i a, in j.

the obstructions of folly, knowing

that none can sin except against himself by thwarting, starving, or violating his own nature, and that if we do our duty to ourselves, the perfect day will eonie--slowly, it may bc--for all true progress is by infinitesimal degrees; but surely, nevertheless, even though it be, as the poet sang, "While the rteriixl HKch wntcll Hll.l wnlt." Lomdov, Kxoi.Axn, Nov. 1B96, The State Debt. In the past two years the state has paid off 11,000,000 in bondi of the permanent state debt. During the past year $(iiK.(HHI have been paid. This payment saved the State tH 1,000 ill interest. The total state debt is a little more than six million. If the state debt sink ing fund levy isn't ret 1 need, the whole debt, with careful management, can Im- canceled in eight years.

Lawrence Madison Marion Marshal Martin Miami M ( m n ie Montgomery Morgan Newton Nobis Ohio range

I wen

Parke Perry

Pike Porter Posev

Pulaski Putnam Randolph kinley Hush So itt Shelby Spencer Starke St. Joseph Steu hen Sullivan S w itzerland Tippecanoe Tipton I'nion Vanderburgh Vermillion Vigo Wabash Warren Warrick Washington Wavne

Wells White Whitley Totals

McKinlev

3.-I40 tii:t :n nioii h4i.7 r7 ttlUK 32 el 3 1552 ls '-'4 ;sou 344U 'J" 14H0: 72 15 '-'7'.4 'J.Ylii 30 1851 4392 54 3785 3897 22 448-.' :is:" :7 H447i !iH07 : 1055 1490 4 o7K.- 3120 1! SSlSj 2714 H SO 284 17 :ii7H 8137 a'l 42.V1 7;i40 58 3005 1215 3 4888 8180 152 1808 L'140 11 :r44 :w74 21 2997 2HO! 22 2H44 1780 12 2891 2340 10 22 347 1 42 5072 7723 12 3334 3434 21 2947 4U43 47 258rt 22W 23 2813 24H; 2.r. J.-Ki.". ipn 33 1880 4(io 4 31KHI 419Ö m 3750 4117 54 3o74i 2870 19 1H0H 2032 27 8880 3473 62 2848 StWi 24 1880 2040 18 .'$083 2288 29 4349 3480 44 2872 4342 43 1 (Mio 2442 22 3418 4883 46 4M1 4091 2.5 2421 3103 30 7880 8388 88 80828 27261 1H5 8648 2938 40 1719 1384 9 8802 3390 37 2422 2488 27 4183 4353 24 2414 2688 20 1204 154T 6 3071 8872 27 527 98 1797 2044 10 8070 1751 13 2777 2847 40 2109 2139 lti 2567 2332 16 8026 2853 16 8108 252 30 19M 1846 21 3218 2022 82 8877 474 37 2714 2890 10 8602 2891 30 1237 837 10 3828 3219 54 27 4") 3047 10 120! 1280 8 1247 7138 1864 2866 50 4010 2317 47 1742 10.37 3 4689 239 3 28 Pi 2268 18 1915 1118 15 7066 8015 27 1814 2141 16 7V.H 84)20 40 2891 4319 53 1100 2045 13 2902 2482 12 2il3 2214 13 4047 841 4 8728 2212 4S 2687 2883 37 24!M 2242 20 3)504iij323861 3003

make

V.r'et'"'

"'Cause U'h so red." "What makes it so red?" "Makes such splendid blick.

And the wife went on with her work, and a weary look swept over

her face that told volumes of fruitless struggles with that profound

28 reasoning wheel of her husband. St A mechanic of an inventive turn p of mind got erpetual motion on h the brain and invented a clock that I9 was to run until it wore out. The

a 8 i. r

1

weights were 80 arranged that as

18 ,)ne Me ran down it wound the tne labor market and go to produc-

3ti other side up, when the automatic

11 touching of a lever reversed the ; process, and so on. It was a very 4 tine scheme, but he ought to have ii found out that action and reaction I are equal before he called all his

g friends in to witness the failure of the laborer would

T4 the clock to run at all. 28 "If the nations of the earth were 7 to cease coining gold, and the vast

3 15

men who are really free than it can

oppress the birds of the air. There

is a large class of labor of the common, unskilled sort, that would gravitate to this free land, get a cow and a pig or two, with some chickens, have a garden plot or a small farm or as large a one as they could cultivate and thus cease to be competitore in the labor market. The work they have been doing for fifty cents to a dollar a day would have to be done by some one, and the $1.50 man will be called on to do it. If he thought he could do better by "squatting"

on free land, he would not do it,

either; and labor of a higher grade

would be called on. Thus the army

of the unemployed, partly employed

and poorly paid, would vanish from

ing the thousand and one things

that are needed to purchase the

products of the others. As a de

mand for commodities is a demand

for labor, there would be an inincreasing demand for labor, until

receive the full

value of his labor. The capitalist,

no longer controlling the natural re

sources of the country, would have to

be satisfied with the mere wages of

superintendence, which would bring

II a gold bug recently

K "No," he replied. "The value I(( of gold is intrinsic and stable. You 15 can melt it up, and it's all there II worth just as much as bullion, as ,M, it is coined." y, W'hat can you do with a man 33 like that? 23 "McKinlev savs there isn't work

, w W enough in the country. 1 think

4 there is work enough in the country

4 I think there is work

10 men have no 30 4. unnlhnr

v iiiumii. 1 .

I - 11 X' B I

iiu.1 a

3

"Anywhee he can get a chance." "Hut suppose no one will hire

in

of

'Nonsense. Kvery man

40 right to work," he replied.

87 "Where?" I asked.

13 14

v,- "nut suppose no

22 him? I say be has no right to work I except he can find a master to hire

J. him, and that is not a right, but a 4' permission." "i "Oh, you're an anarchist." I "Speaking in the abstract, does

the earth belong to the human race

14 or to the landlords?" I asked an 13 other. II "To the human race."

J "Then where is the wrong JL humanity's taking its own?" 14 "Why, you'd rob these men

br their property that they've worked

hard and paid for."

"Hut they paid for stolen goods." "Oh, well, we can't go so far

1 back as that. Thev own it now all J right." H "Hrown," said the pilot to the 4i landlubber who knew nothing of

1 the compass, "steer directly toward that star dead ahead while 1 go to 3! supper." 4 "Aye, aye, sir." 2 On his return the pilot noticed that the ship was off her course. j.i "Where is that star I told you to in steer for?" he demanded. 13 "Jocks! I passed that ten minJ utes ago. Give me another one."

quantity that is being coined yearly

4 had to seek another market, would

17 not the value of gold fall?" I asked iUHt what they are worth and no ..1.1 .1 1 .

more, with whatever a natural denvind, freed from monopoly, might establish as the ruling rate of interest for his actual capital. Does any reasonable man who has taken the trouble to study the single-tax doubt that these results would follow? Then why do we

continue to fritter away our energies tn strikes and boycotts? Why do

men commit violence and thus de-

is work enough, but feat the aims which might be peaceright to do it," I said ablv attained through the single-

tax? Why do we flagitiously violate the law of equal freedom by compelling men to join us in theBe enterprises when far greater results might be attained by this simple change in the incidence of taxation? Henry George has told why: "It is not kings, nor capitalists, nor land owners that anywhere really enslave the jieople. It is their own ignorance." 1 would call the attention of those interested in moral reforms to

the ease with which an honest living could be made under the conditions I have described, which could not fail to make more ami more distasteful the less honorable

occupations, beginning with the lowest. With the lapse of time it would be quite possible for every man to become his own capitalist, and the rate of interest decline for want of demand. Labor would thus tend to assume the co-operative form, as great economies are thereby possi

ble. Whether or not this would eventually develop into the dream of the state socialist I am not prepared to say, but I am sure it would contain the soul of socialism without infringing individual liberty. When will men learn that logic is as truthful as mathematics, and its conclusions to be as implicitly trusted! When will they learn

is con-

10 I

A ..I . t ., .. .... . . .1

:u Anu me puy 01 it is mat men mat truth, and only truth,

r) who reason in these ways call them- sistent with the best aspirations of -4 boIvou rofldinnlili) Itoincru Vt.,-1 Knmanilu''

!men seem able to nan straight, clear-cut

plurality lsi21

Total Hent lev (Pro) vote..., Total Socialist-1. alxir vote.. Total vote of state, 1888

Total vote ot täte, 1HÜ2 .V.4013

comprehend a As 1 note the appareut inability principle until of large masses of men to compre-

they attempt to reason or "steer" hend the profound, yet simple,

2270 hy it, when they immediately lose' philosophy of the single-tax, and

..337 their bearings and pass the star, listen to their "unanswerable" ...341.343 1 doubt if their is a man in the arguments against it. I am filled

astounding

Increase 82330 True Happisess. The more we have the more we want. True happiness consists in

contentment. A contented negro slave is often happier than the

President. President Polk once called up a

favorite slave and told him to make three wishes and he would see that they were carried out. After medi

tating several minutes. Jack said:

"Well, Marse James, I want a pa'rof boots." "O, try something better Jack,"

snid the President.

"Weil, Marse James, I always

want to have a plenty of fat meat."

"Now, Jack, you have only one more wish. Can't you think of

something better than a pair of

limits and fat meat?" After thinking a while he gave it

I

I nited States so dull as not to with contempt for the

know he has as good a right In life, stupidity of the race.

liberty and the pursuit of happiness as any other man, yet how few are

able to take the next step in reason;

and see that a necessary corollary

Steph bn Beul

New York, N. Y.

The infant daughter of Mr.

up, saying: "Marse James, it

fat meat, I tloan' want mithin mo

Sixteen ounces

to every pound of promise in the

advertisements of The Coi riek

of this is an equal right to the means Mrs. Willard Fleming died

and last

whereby life is sustained, liberty Monday evening at 4 0 clock. Ihe

enjoyed and happiness pursued interment was made at W alnut Hills

the land which the Creator has giv-l 1 uesaay morning at IU 0 ciock. 11

en us? And how few of those who "M the first liorn ot Mr. and Mrs.

have seen this right can see the way Fuming and in their breavement for its resumption, though it be they have ihe sympathy of a large shown them again and again? And circle friends. Petersburg Press.

still others their are who, having seen the wav and even recoimired 11 epras to demanded by

the

its justice, contend that it must not RepMhlican party of the next Indibe carried out until the present an,a IHlature that that body pass "owners" of the earth have been R, 'inslative apportionment bill that

conqiensated for the loss of their 8nau w ,na" ""sub

mortgage on humanity. a gerrymander, mran am apportion, The single-tax will wipe out the men.1 W0,uM lPW7 knocked out

speculative or selling value of land. Dy lL .e supreme i,ouix. ine prop-

Is not that as it should be? IB w ining iw ine wgi iwun 10 uo 1 there anv reason in nature why man to paM Prtectlv fair apportionthat is hom on th Prth hm.U ment. This would be honest, and

had a pa'rof boots and plenty of 0ve no rights m the earth except

m' an ..nfl.in m' " ne - oiivs mem :

It is evident that, if men were

labor

it would lie good politics. N. A.

Ledger.

'The waytu wealth is as plain

t . ...... 4 I. .1

it iiiir.firiiiiini.i. ii'r ill .' .M r. . . tr.M . u , w . r .. . .

01 I I .V.I 1 II Uli. V I - " "' 0 I w tvn.r Ihn ...-,. r irnwarv

. . . . ..... cms vi 1 rruw ... r wir. 1.1111.CI . , v , 1 . .

prohiem would soon settle itself, Have tho".hi to ,nd ,dve'rsince capital can no more oppress ti(je theB1 wej