Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 13 October 1905 — Page 7
, . SOU AND JUST NOW
Slocua
I ..Ml
to
i . r far-swa) dime he. i i age time, ... I.i I Ii. j.nri) Uli Dl i tikis . l , . , .. u that! ' natali i.we gad pN r.ow" . thai t an in country." I gft no wilder nur I rttdy t rVMM m ,.r t." warm. I . i ! ...i !!,. uii i to alt ..n( a project ao areai
, mil i rtaln to in fin r- , ., . U tt.ey wait " Folk f&vto' hrf' aes aso. inces had Mows i ; it, woul In ! stand any ahow ,l i ) tit own. B . I,,,. V 1 1 our :.int, I , 1. ! .nit of tie wren: . , ,11 ink that right lre and . 'II and between , ! i !.. aria' Hy spout. j .hi Ia to nt t. ! . marvelous work ju d turn RIO otktf man ho; i 'migfet-'a'-hSSfl piaUe a ; imm nfeerla' how I i. earth ever A08S the fit at ''. I re ir. ! ) now." ' man. In 8uics Maguslne.
Indulge tu that aurt or thin Wim, pla) a game, no matter what it ma) lo I uU it with ail my might." "Are you aur' of thai? ' she akeii with a MBtkfl i hut ho didn't mule, ,.n .. "I think I know of one gum in wimn you MMI took purl that you played rat li-r careleHsIy." She looked hai-k at him hn the count was leading her away I In p ua. a Thorn 1 1 in h fac it look that las COttld not mistake, but she htuiU d again aii.l called "Aren't you going to dance this e tilt; The muHic is starting." He claimed her, later, for a waltz and Ifcai Mka her If hhe wouldn t rathealt out on the porch, where it waa eool and dark Very well.-' Hhe said, "if you dot. t eiijo dancing wliii tue I'm ratfctl tirtd."
He chose to Ignore fiT Ii a Men u- and led her to a corner when- they could be alone "1 suppose I ought not. " he .said "to dran yon away from the coin t, but thia 1 probably the last chain e I ii have gad there h one or two things I want t tay to you. Of course you don't kttOw that there are people around here who hav begun tobet on on do you?" "I hadn't heard of any such thit i "A wager wa.- BOdO a lit' le uuii- agfl that involves a suit of clothes ou each Bide. The arilloiil.i . li:ent of vniir an.
CHILD'S GOOD LOOKS. 4 Oi eat Deal Can Ba Done Toward Improvement of i'eatuias aud General Appertrauca,
"Uro
A SUITABLE COIFFURE. How to Arrange the Tresse to Co.
ceal Various Defects of li
tuie and Contour.
are tiling um, n Ii.. i
vat .,ot do. " a a pfcjrafcaj cullurlst. if Ur good looks Mra io a Bfeggrvad
m rub LerTuae 1,7 !" the Pklladelahis
One every woman owes hirsetf la to ax bcr hair in ih. most beaou.li. a
! manner If ube dott.L t know Low ab
".She, must nut Ii tf M he; far e.
nut not gel in the habit of burying he now In her pillow ".ShQ mut not prthH upward on the tip of her nose at any time
Nor tiiu: hb.. uu her noae cr njure .t If she can poibly help t A little
are in (jua-dinx the noae against haiife kaocka will often nave a noae Troin dUfiguretnent later on "And while rpeakin of a child s nose
It la a pood thins to mention the nom-a .'.!...!..
Hwn ieihoiiH. liiere comes no time In a VOOaaa'i life when hir noae I may not be praaatd Ml of shape. And there i no hour In her lif uh.
. . ...w win ii nuc may not bafta to re. lain t The nose that Is wide an I. ir-a d. and the ooie that Is flat ran be lifted and the nose that Is humped or crooked can be straightened. ja never too late to menii a nose "Never let the nose become closed. Duakttttf in breathing is sure tn dilate the nostrils. 1 hey will stand nut aa no
Press
Mrs Leland Harrison, the well known miniaturist, made a series of skew bea to show ewi woman who reads thu
paper Ju8t what to do muh her hair
The firm sk tch shows a woman may wr a RD04eraU posaaAdoat If her forb ad is of that lovely shape which run don. not up, to a slight point in the eaattr caused by the way the hair grow s. The woman with a receding forehead, that most hopeless of all defecia to coo-
Returning from Captivity Sunday Scbael - . ,oa lor Oct. 15. IMS Seci If Prvparad far Tr.'i Pater
W"sss1 to the count will have to be to spoil the symmetry of the facP
Play
ly
ing the Game to Win
made within a aaek, or aoaae oOfl wiil
lose." owr interesting Let me see-asult of flothes is what a gent leman u.-ualh bets on an election isn't it?" "It's likely to be "I am Immensely flattered. An elec
tion ought to be an important thing.
ihe way to mend U is by constant working upon it. Do not irritate It. nor make It red. Inflamed nr sore. But at light, before going to bed, massage the sides of the noae, lifting and pressing it Into Grecian shape. The straight tlreelan nose is the pretty nose af today. And the woman whose nose
ml was bowing gracefully be- : at.'i vowing that it waa all BD tientional" when m ran up the steps. He had o M t there before the foreigner rodui ad to her but a nail in one id S sot his calculations,
: HCl as if bis hopes, too, J i w 11 be abandoned. nattar, old man?" asked
: - haw. as Thurntn. 15 minr, flung a n.auuine aside and : of the clabhottM lo find a chair
oreh. I ikea faej think anything s Am 1 breaking out or turnr.ly. If 1 were you I'd try
MSI irurdcrosjv. Hy the i iear case w ith his nob Bertha Paulding." ; tunk so?" ii seen them?" he was being introduced I e while ago. What s be-
" waai is dk on aa tiacuoa ! sat turns, up or dwn. or Utt flat, la tne on me I must also be important must!.': woman who needs to put in a little I? The count will be amused when 1 i time massaging her nose.
tell him about it. He will regard it as one of our delightful BBCOBVtfitiOftab ities. Oh. that music is too good to lose Don't you want to dance?" The ouut w;is waiting for her when they finished, and It w as two weeks later when she and Thornton met again. Ullley Rcnsbaw had won his bei ÜM engsgement to fount I) Kstrevil'.e had been uiaaaaaad within the spaetfled time, and her sister. Mrs. Richmond, was one of the happ:cst women in th world. It was she. in fact who bad ti'ralded the glad news. Thornton had taken dinner at the club and a? sitting abme In a corner of t hi llg liv na room She stood beside him before he knew that anyone had entered "Well. ' she said, extending a hand "aren't you going to congratulate n.e "I suppose I'll have to. to be polite. But I'm not sure that you are the one to be congratulated." Very nice of you to say that- aftei you've lost." "After I've lost yes But I've got si used to losing that I don't expert any. thing else any more."
I I I I I Ml IM,,.,
Vli-BUT)
"Remember always that the cartllege Is soft and that you can flatten the nose a a blow. In the same way, you can lift It and mold It Into nlre shape. "The eyebrows ran always be made nice, and In the (Mt of a little rhild the eyebrows are susceptible of much treatment. They ran be curved and made as pretty as one would want to see "A rhild's mouth. If Imlined to sag. can be massaged upward a lif at the sorners. A very little thin massage cream should be used. It will make the skin fairer and more supple and will not be In any y Injurious. Indeed. It preserves the tone of the flesh, this dally application of skin food to the Tare "Mass.ge the corners of the mouth upward omtt a day and you will und that pretty soon the mouth will begl". to curve naturally and the appearance will be a thousand times Improved. "A child s hair can be encouraged to grow down on the forehead. If a little oil Is massaged into the roots of the hair, along the line of the forehead. It will encourage the hair to grow.
BK i MIN-iLY ARHAN'i ; ED. ceal. should arrange ber hair low down over her forehead.
A woman who has to struggle with prominent ears also has a serious timo of It In dressing the hair so that she ran hide them. And the sketch berf given shows the very best way for her lo : learn to do her hair. The fourth sketch shows the angle at which the hair should be worn if one has a retrousse nose, drawn up from all I sides, w ith the coil a llttleover half high I In the head. In the fifth sketch Mrs. Harrison gives the general Idea of how the hair should be drawn to suit the face, one at once recognizing that the lines are right.
THE WOMAN OF FORTY. Should Be at Her Very Best at Thia Age and How to Attain Thia Deairable End.
lies
re In the billiard room
r a lesson. ' be taking a deep inter ( afT.iir." l inmie Farnham and I hare
"What a pessimist! I suppose you're i There are a few things to be re mem
h.
WHAT WILL TllK COUNT SATr B u It 11 rust me a suit of Bel if h.r engagement to the couut mnooacad within a week." - bands closed tightly, but
'Vtnamc whatever savag'?
w l
blaming poor old Ka'e o.o
"No, I don't believe in Fate. It's just a case of people. If other people could find happiness in making me happy th? whole quest lo,-. would be solved But
there's the trouble To make nie happy
it would be necessary for i t !.. r j ople to make themselvrs miserable. So 1 continue to lose "
"SM11 I doal believe you w mil i keep I on losing if i-ti a'..- r ;. !'.; ! to win One ran hardly expect to be victorious wlv n one giv. s me .- gam away Your tailor pr diably is glad, I though " "I d m t sr. where ho conies fn." "The suit that you will have to pay for. Isn't he going to make it ?" After he had explained that he had not been a party to the wager thiy sat looking steadily at ea b other for a long time "Hut.' she said at last, "you haven't yet convinced me that you nlway. play to wla." There was something In the way she said it that brought him out of his stupor and he .night hi r hards an 1 held them "What ' he asked when she insisted that they must not remain there alone any longer, "will the count say?" "I don t know." she answered with a sigh Probably he will call it ntiotlM of our delightful uncon ventlonalltles." Chicago Record-Herald. Woman's Wsy. Hegpaek 1 tell you. my Henrietta ttvayi means what she says .Ii nkins (lee Whiz! Iwib my wife old "Why that's strange. Doesn't she alwf.is?" "N at all Whenever she says
she Miyi she wants "a little money.' she means 'much money.' " Philadelphia Ledger
tie may have had and asked: U raaaofl have you to think that - 1 iuntlng a title?" yot ever see a woman who ' cragj for one? And, of course. Wd to get him. because her fa'iiey and none of the rest of 1 N touch her for looks." m tCMaad a ktf Ofcld cigar 1 "ii the grass and went Inside. aland the billiard room the .'f endeavoring to explain the onhj of the masse.
" giau you ve come." said Miss I Now you and Count D'Estrein have a game, and I'll watch you hi h is the" Tb netter man?" Thornton asked ihfl henlfated
ao, I wasn't going to sav that. ' be skillful at (his gamennd ' be a )0ttPr man (ban a y 1 ' "' i layer, mightn't one?" Hat question was addressed to the "l: Who shrugced his shoulders exwl and assured her that If was ellgatfallf unconventional." At the rnd of the game, which th"B' wn" ily Thornton put up his ' ' ""med to Miss Paulding to ask: i.,,,,Vmi "'"I think one might be a i v PlyT and not be better man a ho played poorly?" 't t kath ve you tried as hard as I wold ." she answered. "' think the court would have caught '' !' 'f i bad played at."
f-.L . . I
U it h 'nolcated by another shrug the New Jersey coasts Water H ' would undoubtedly hare dlscov- hroufihf In from the daep by fisher 11 '"'emt.t on tit part of ktgof men far out. whare It Is safe from
Three glasses daily la t0c
DtSaaii Task "How can I get the ladles of mv congngation more Interested in heaven?" Blghod the gajOfi young rector of thv' fashionable ehOTCk. "Yen might Intimate that things WtÜ be exduslve there" replied the obi preacher, sadly. "Hy snrh ioans u may le able to arouse a mlid Interest . Pittsburg Post
H Werbling Ring. A wedding without a ring seems incongruous, but In Cadi Spain, no ring is usd. Aftfr Ihe ceremony the hrldcgmm moves the flower fn hl bride's hair from left to right, for in various parts of Spain to wear a rose ntiove your right ar is to proclaim voursi If a w Ife.
bf ted by the woman who is trying to make the oest of a child's looks. And they are rules which can be applied to grown persons as well aa children. "If the hair grows too high on the forehead, rub the roots with sweet oil every night. "Never use more than six drops of oil for the entire forehead "Never brush the hair back from the forehead. Draw It genMy back Ith the finger tips and with a soft brush. "Don't pull tho hair. B, tter let it nar! "Try not to wet the roots of the hair any offener than Is nefssary. Washing the hair is a foe to heavy hair "I'se a little hair tonic one. a week lo keep It from growing nun bark of the ears and in the back of the neck "Don't let your hslr get gray. Treat the roots. If a grown-up person. If a rhild's hair, treat the rods to keep It trom getting thin. "Never braid or twist the hair tight
ly. Never wear the nair the same more than two days In cuocesslon. And. In case of a child's hair, braid It different ways on successive days. The train must never come upon the same pot twice "Treat the feattms and the hair ially. It is time well spent. "To improve the general looks, here are directions for the day Follow them aa regularly as you sleep. They take In the whole countenance: "Massage the skin to make It soft nd white. 'Flnrh the noae if It is flat. "Massage the corners of the mouth If they droop "Straighten the line of the eyebrows "Press back the ears. Don't pull them, but keep them laid back fla; to the head. "Work upon the rheeks to keep them round and firm."'
"At 40 a wonian should be at her very beat." said a beauty-maker She should be her sweetest, her nicest, her loveliest and her most tactful. "In her appearance she should te right in her prime, declares Mme Julie D'Arcy. A man Is at his best at 40. Even so should a woman be at her su-
premest In complexion, figure, tearing, brlghtneas and bloom she should I be at her very height. "There might have been a time when a woman was old at 40. But that waa long ago Now she does not begin to me out much before that time All ', the beautiful leaders of the day are 40 years old. and many of them are a great ' deal more. "The woman of 40 who has never tried to be attractive cannot expect much, for beairy requires a very long degr j of preparation You ennnot rush into I beauty unawares You must work for It ' slowly and you must not be surprised it It comes to you unwillingly. You trust seek It early and late If you expect to i find It. "But don't suppose that the w oman of ! 40 will be beautiful merely If she sue1 ceeds in making her complexion nice. I That is only a very small part of beauty. If the complexion were all that is nee.-H-
sary we ail wouin necome Doaai I There Is a good deal to be acquired be- . sides a good skin. "The beautiful woman of 40 must pos
sess these traits and accompKshmr nta: "She must be supremely tactful. "She must have a very line and intuitive knowledge of human nature. "She must have learned the trick of agreeing with you instead of fighting you In ifher w ords, she must be able to follow the line of the least resistance. Instead of thinking antagonistic thoughts she should be able to tl.ir. g amiable ones. "She must have a superb figure The influence of a good flgur upon the mind of the beholder Is marvellous You ean-
For Rough Hands. Fot hands that ara rough and sensitive from being too much In water, this lotion will be found very delightful: Two ouncea of listerlne and two ounces of glycerin The surface will soon become smoother and less sensitive. The lotion combines nbely with cosmetic jelly, formula of which is: Seven ounces of rose wat-r, 30 grams of gum tragaranth, one ounce of alcohol, one ounce of gly'crln. Soak the
not really admire a woman whose figure Is poor "The beautiful woman of 40 must hav-i fine eyes, a good skin. handsune hair and the right expression The latter conaes from 40 years of the right kind of thinking
Late Mode for the Hair. The very newest way of arrang'n :he hair Is to wave It prettily, draw it up nn top of the head, with the side locks out soft and fluffy but not over the yes at all. the entire arrangement being topped off with a crown like braid. This Is a German style, partleti.arl) suitable for matrons The Kng-
iish manner of hair dressing Is the no
ttagaianth in the rose water for three worn K iong by the present queen of days strain forcibly through muslin. England -a thick "front" of curia adding glycerin and alcohol. A half This Is extremely harsh, and onlv a
traapoonful of pure borax Is aa Ira i most ngal looking woman can wear 't.
See Water ns Medicine. Sea water ns a me II dual 1 everaoe chiefly designed to reduce ohealty, hai
brxme fashionable a ti e resorts d
' eotil .1
n L I m 'pollution
normen continued. "1 uerar , doaa
Biwaaaai Any pcrfum may be added White Wool Dresses. There are some stunning while fimiiD stuffs out that will make up into those informal Utile dreesea which are M satisfactory to wear In the evenings at home. As the materials wasj well they should be made up Id th amplest st let possible.
Dinner Calls. Tea t dlnnsr lovitr.tlon renulrea a pars nal call upon the hoaiess a week after ike ewai
The Unresponsive Woman. Of course the art of listening can ba carried to extreme Th- person who stands and stares lato your eyes and says not a word Is embarrassing The woman whi sits mum while you talk .wirf: If hoarse Is never popular.
Etiquette of Calls. In large cities as well a In small towns newcomer must waP for old residents to make first cal s. Washing ton, D C. being the onlv city la wbi:k Uu custom ss reversed
NKHtiOX TfcXT Verne & a
aOU EN TEXT-'Tha Lord hata done frat things for us, wht-rwf w ar K ad -rla rr. kM 1 Tlill Accordln- to Prjf Beecher It vaa i u C U. suonafttr the conquest of Babj is by ru 'ompare. Daalei 1:1 '. Bfcl It was TO ) earn after t IS tirsl V,-,r m ;oi of XI en b Nebu. l,ndnsSf PL-ACS- -Capital uf the Persian Kins-Hum-either Bab) Ion or K Datar.a. and also Jerusa.tm to which the exllrs rStOtas . CRIPTI RE RCrKRENCEg lsaiak chai u. EsekJe and Jerrm.ah than M. & 2,-43, : tall of the return from cai.' vli Tl.t return u rerurJsd lo Eaffaaad Ns
h err. iah. Comment and Suggestive Thought. INTRODUCTORY. Even before the kttlialag of the exile, when It was only threatened, there was joined with the warning a promise of restora tion. See I.-a. 10 and It Assyria the oppressor should be destroyed like a cedar, though It towered like the huge cedars of lbnon (Isa 10:12-19. 24. 33. 34: comp. Kiek 31:3 11. Isalab again and analn prophesies the Returr (chapters 40-06 and even names Cyrus as the one through whom P should come. Through K.ekiel come promises of the new heart which would render the return morally possible (Ezek. 11 and N). He pictures the valley of dry boflOS, symbolizlnc the condition of Israel in captivity, again coming to life In the return (Bask. 17). See K.ek 20. 33. 34. The whole of Ezekiei, as of I-aiah, is an effort, through threats and denuncia tlon- of sin, thro'iub appeals to do bet ter. through promises and visions of hope, to make the people return spiritually to Ood. that they might return in visible reality. And he foretells how the nations were so controlled that a restoration of the Jews would be posslbb- Jeremiah, making th same appeals, goes farther and point? out the time when the return can rw made, 70 years after the captivity (Jer. 25:12: 29:10). V 1 "In the first year of Cyrus king of Persia:" Not his flr-t year a king of Persia (B. C. Mt), but either as conqueror of Babylon 538) or the first year of his personal rule at Babylon after his other conquests (SS; i "The word of the Lord by . . . Jeremiah" (23:12; 29:10) pronii-ing that he would bring about a reMtrn from captivity after 70 years "The Lord (Jehovah stirred up the spirit of Cyrus " It Is quite possible. It Is even Implied in the narrative here, that Daniel, or some prominent Jew. called the attention cf Cyrus to the prophecy In Jeremiah, and espe Mally the remarkable prophecy In Isa 41:26-28; 45:1. V. 2. "Thus saith Cyrus:" It If probable that the author here gives the substance of the proclamation, and not the full official document. "He hath cha'ged m' " He accepted the prophecies as a charge from the Ood of the Jews. V. 3. "Who Is there among you:" The return was to be a volunteer movement wh'rh in all respects was the best both for the purpose of Cyrus and for the new Jewish settlement The "God of Israel . . . which Is In Jerusalem " As the chief seat of his worship. V. 4. ' And who-'oever reniaineth." R. V 'Ms ItftT of the captives, survives Connect in any place where he soJourne'.h. without a comma, with let the mm of his place, his heathen neighbors, help him with silver, etc. give him funds for his journey, and Ihe freewill offering in aid of the tern Mt
V. .'. "Then rose up the chief of the fathers:" The Return deserlbed In to-day's lesson was under Zerub babel a prince of the royal line of
David, called the Tirshatha. or Pasha i;V'ra 2:63), and under Jeshua. the hereditary high priest (Ezra 3:8). Th' se were among the "chief of the fathers . . . and the priests." V. 6. "And all they that were about them:" Their heathen neighbors and friends, as in Egypt at the time of the aadkat. V 7. "Cyrus the king brought forth the vessels of the house of the Lord:" Xehurhadne7.ar little thought that he was unconsciously preserving the sarr-d vessels of Israel In a safe and inviolable stronghold, till the da when Jehovah would bring about thel restoration to His people." V. 8. "By the hand of Mlthredath" (given by. or dedicated to Mithra. the un god). He had these treasures In his charge. "Sheshbazzar" (fire worshiper) : The Persian name of Zenibbabel (born in Babylon) 11. "All the vessels . . . were five thousand and four hundred:"
This Is more than double the sum of the preceding numbers 2.499. It Is probable, that only the larger or more costly vessels were numbered In detail, and the 5.400 Includes a great number of smaller and less costly nnes. So they are reckoned by Joephiis (Ant Jud. 11:1). Illustrative Pointa. This Is a picture of God's discipline
nf His people Me iloes not love to afflict His children. He gives bitter medicines In order to brlig back health His afflictions are to purify Ifie heart to ennoble the character, tc break the power of sin. Note that It Is a sign of God's favor to have trials. "If ye endute chastening, God dealeth with you as vlth wona" (Heb. 12:7): "The devil leslr-s to winnow Peter, not Jndnjr The thief does not break Into nn mmy ouaue but Into some furnished be is ir full tranaty. " Adama.
i DANGER OF THE REPUBLIC. Boodle and the Corporations Control the Corrupt Patty in Fowtr.
Vhen the ia .-lalcitd. pi I8h and In succeeding campaigns, that an tnuruious corruption fund wa. raised from the railroads, banks trust comvai.u s. Insurant corporations and other sources. It wax Indignantly denied by the republicans. Since those campaign ihe evidence has been leaking out that ttii.,. charge- wtre true and tlo- amount not exaggerated. Enough money was subscribed to buy every voter that was willing to sell hli vole In the doubtful stat--s, and the rt-Milt in 1 .-h-weil thai of the votes so bought about N 01 DdlvlsV el between the close states decided tne election. The latest evidence on the provider of that corruption fund has been given by Mr. Perkins, partner of J P Morgan and a. so malted with the New York Life Insurance -oinpany. before the committee of the New York legislature, now Investigating the life insurance companies ot that state, i-fe testl fld that the New York Life Insurance company paid $50.0Gu last fall to tho republican campaign fund, and tha' greater sums were paid In 1896 and 1900 These enormous contributions from one corporation Indicate the vast amount of money used to corrupt the voters of the United States, for there Is no doubt the other Insurance companies paid similar amounts, and the railroads and trusts even more. Eighteen hundred and ninety-six w as the beginning of the era uf graft and corruption thai has since' spread like a prairie fire from one end of the country to the other and that has resulted in the scandals that have been exposed of the republican management of our national affairs and hose states where that party Is in the ascendancy. Will the honest Toters allow such a system to continue? If they do. It Is not too much to say that
j the republic will be undermined and a Wall street oligarchy of wealth will i soon rule instead of the people
We are not very far from that to-day. We hear of visits ol Wall street magnates to Oyster Bay and we see their partners appointed to positions wher they can do vast service to their associates, which from the nature of things must be to the detriment of the people. President Roosevelt must hare -nown of the large contributions from the Wall street Interests to his campaign fund. Mr Bliss, the treasurer of the republican national committee received the money and Mr Cortelyou. who has since been rew arded by his appointment as postmaster general anu is still chairman of the republican national committee expended what the trusts and the corporations provided. The late Senator Hanna might be excused for demanding and expending such vast sums as he received in 189C, for the republican emergency w as great, but last year there was no need to corrupt the voters. It was patent to even superficial observers that Mr. Roosevelt would be elected at least three months before the event occurred. The fact is that the republican workers have become so debauched by being paid that they refuse to work or vote until the usual honorarium and boodle is forthcoming Is anyone foolish enough to believe that these corporations contribute these lart:e sums without expecting and probably being promised, ail vantages cr spe cial privileges in return. The trust corporations pay to prevent tariff reform: the railroads pay to prevent being controlled; the banks, and life insurance companies pay because they are controlled by the same financial interest, and receive special favor and privileges from the political managers. How d) democrats, who are paying double for life insurance than w hat it is honestly worth and who own stock In
railroads and banks, like their money being expended to keep the corporations In power, instead of the larger dividends that would be paid under an honest administration? The beef trust is still selling adulterated meat At the instance of th League Island navy yard officials, the agent of Swift & Co . the Chicago packers, has been arrested In Philadelphia for food adulteration and bound over by the magistrate In $1.000 bail. The prosecutiou is under the Pennsylvania state law. there being no federal statute under which persons selling impure fool can be prosecuted. It does not speak well for the pure food commissioners of other states that no similar efforts are being made todlscover the sale of embalmed beef where such laws for the proti'ctlon of the people ere on the statute books. It is hardly likely that artificial preservatives ar. only used by the beef packers 01 meat destined for Pennsylvania. Nor is this an isolated i ase. "According to a statement made t him by attorneys for Swift & Co.. Commissioner Warren says the concern admits, through its lawyers, that it has been selling meat In which artificial preservatives which arc prescrllied bylaw have been placed "Hiring the last year. Mr Warren state, flwlft A Co. have paid more than 12.00. Vi fines for rotation of the pure food lawt of the '.fate."
In whipping his messr, Into ihape It looks as If the president this tear might be embarrassed with wealth of extra raw material. Indiaaxpolis News (Ind.). Some of those republican mem;ers of congress who were lsr.dcd in heir seats by the landslide last fall ire felling In Interviews what tin y ar (Ding to do In the way of lef Islatlou it Ine coming session. It will take all he next recess for them to explain to heir constituents bow they didn't do I ind blame It on ho speaker an 1 the Qtnmitte) ou rules.
