Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 June 1906 — Page 7
te SI -V1
r . l
X J ws I
PECK'S BAD )Y WITH THE CIRCUS
pose to give you a banquet to narrow! hear that be I flying high, demand
b
HON. GEORGE W. PECK
Ar
H...I i.) J. B tWi.
ttigbt, at whuh wo cha ail r.iakf petch .t. hu I tin ii ynu will be provided with herses, atippli. s aii I mam f, and guib-d away fro.n here hlindf 1 m1, ami within 41 houra you will be free as the bin!.-; and all we a.-k U that peg will gem r gift us and our hiding plate away u Billy I'.nkerton U it a go?" I 'a said It was i k all i uh !' taking the lainiid money, but he would think it over and dieam over i', and may lie take his -hare of tin- -ag hut he wanted to be allowed to return It If. after (ailing a meeting of hin board of directors, they should refuse
to neeive th- tainted money I'a add
m.aa Stirrnn And Earns the Good ui .i.-.i iha i f llrArtnru f if n rlr-
I ' J m t ' I 1 1 1 1 i " i -"ta a n - ' v. - - v - of the Bandits They Oiv , , ... lrht not be as particular ns a
li a Course Dinner speeches hui h or eollege, and he t bought h--
rouid a sure the pum that the money would not OMsM beaM t" bOtfcH them Th leader of the gang said that would be all rlj?ht. and for pa and 1 unl the hoya to begin to pack up and get ready to reiurn to eivili it on and all It wickedness We worked all day
an nlaved ( inch for hundred dollar
bills all the evening, and the next day arrat g4 for the banquet.
WlD'u uight came, and the pine
kn-i'-i were lit in the cave, al out 15
bandits and pa and 1 sat down to a cour e banquet on the floor of the rave, and ate and drank for an hour. W. had few dishea, except tin cups and tin plates, .but it was a banquet ai! right. The first course was snip aerved In cans, eaeh man having a can of soup, wi'h a hole in the top, made by driving a nail through the tin. and
w the Banquet Pa la Made
gn Member of tbe Banded the Bad Boy Allowed to Go Fiee Without Ransom. We had the worst ar.d tbe heat two of our llv. s wliil prisoners of e train robbers at the Hole-ln-the-i.. raus- we had plenty to eat. od company, with hunting for IB the foothills by day. and cinch rr. but the sleeping on the rocks , ave. with buffalo robea for iral the greatest of all. Pa got . r every day, but he yearned to and would look for hours lie .llnasorus valley, hoping to ... rs or ctrus men who might . ir capture, charging down the to hills and up the valley to our but nobody ever came, and pa
w - ST L J C3
Day tbe Robbers Came ..e Robinson Crusoe
Back fioru a Raid with Piles of Greenbacks.
the
on
DM times for a couple of days the would go away to rob a train r a stage coach, and leave us with a v guards, who acted as though they lb tat us to try to escape ao they . old Ehoot us In the back, but we . !. and fried bacon and elk meat ad sighed for rescue. One day the robbers came back from :i iu .iioi f prA.. T-. Iim 1. a ay biu
a bale or hay. and it was evldenv had robbed a train and been re ted. because one roan bad a bullet in
thigh, ar.d pa had to use his know
we sucked the soup through the hole The next course was fish, each man
having a can of Eardines, and we ate
tbe lank. uta on the
dollar, and is looked upon as a great financier. It has I n a pleasure to us
to have this kindly old man visit us, aud by his example of the Gold eg Uule. to do to others aa you would be done by, make us contented with our lot We are not the kind of business men who try to ruin, the business of competitors by poisoning their wells, or freezing them out oi l i-inesa. If any other train robbcra want to do busi nes in our territory, they have the HUM rinhts that we have, and the WOrM is big enough for all to ply the'r li 1 1 Now I am Kolng to (all upon
our Irletid, IHehaala Hill, my associate in ( rime, who w ;i .sounded by a mls'linrted load of bii'kshot In our latest raid. Which buck snot were so ably removed from hi.s p.-rson by our distinguished friend who is so boju to leave us." and the Nader again passed the loving MM nnd gave way to Uuckskln Hill, who said: "Pals I do not know if you have art BWpaeta1 tha' before I Joined this bunch i wa. i- ;.ed In crime, but 1 must c.nf. s to you that I was a Chicago alderman for DM term, during the passage of thn gas franchise and the traction deal, but I trust I have re
formed, becau-e I hav led a different life all these years. I l:ke this free
life of the mountains, where what you get in a hohVup ie yours and you do not have to divide with poli'iclans, and if you n fuse to divide they squeal on you. and you ice the guide board pointing to Juliet. I would not go back to the wicked life of an alderman, to make a dishonest living by holding up bills until the agent cam I
around and t'ive me an envelope, but do want to hear from my old pals In the common council, and I would ask our corpulent friend, who so ably picked the buckshot out of my remains, when he passes through Chlrago to go to the council chamber and give my benediction to my LuMoalM. and ask them to repent before it is lOO late, and come west and g into Ultimate robbery, far away (TOM the sleuths who gre MM 'antly on thetr trail? While the lamp continues to burn the vilest alderman may buy a ticket bo 'he free
and healthy west. and. we will give him a welcome. Old man. shake." and
Baefcakla Bill shook pa's hand ar.d sat dowa on his knee-, b. ause his wounds were not healed. The hMUHf of the gang then called upon pa for a few remarks, and pa sa d: ' Gentlemen, you have done me great honor to make me an honorary lumber Of your organization, and I .-hall go away from here with a feeling that you an the highest type of robbers, men that It Is a pleasure to know, and that yi u are not to be
l mentioned in the same category oi tne i wicked men who rob the poor ''Pht mmä left in what we consider civil L.a-
QUARTERLY REVIEW Sunday School Leisen lor Ju:i 24.1906 Specti Prepared lor Thli Ppor .
GOLDEN TKXT OF Ql'AItTKR.- . -r i.. .ii h aku like this i.i.ui." -John
ML
The worda of
thpp with hard ta(k. Then we ha 1 a
game course, consisting of fried elk. j tIon Jn tne eagt you only take toll
and then a salad of canned baked; ffom tne prPat corp rations who hav
pi. nty. and your robberb -. do not ', hrinc sorrow and sadness to the ioor
Ik for let .ream. W hen tne Daaquei i anJ hliriKrT 0 mat'er what induce
beaat. and c iffet with eondenstd milk
and a ?iHi.ful e;r two of OMll M 4
mi
was over the leader of the bandi s r, j . i ,,r, the i!.ue !!. r of Mi ' cave
with th' butt of his revolver for attention, and. taking a canteen of whis-
1
all might
e of surgery to dig out the shot. Mk, and thee he sn,.Ke as i- nows ber. big b.uat tehMI a aur- ' "Fellow JW. 1 ve
... , 1 I . . 1 - .1
the outside worm, wnn an us
D, and succeeded in getting the i out and healing up the eores. ao bandits t nought pa was great, ea he insisted that the leader let
know how much it would be to easy m
sum us. so we could send to the clr : - money, the leader told pa he
ments my fef held out to me in the fu- . re to join the life Insttran e robbers, the ixditical robbers, the great Mwnnatioa Hiat wring th last dol-
oviug cup. he drank to the lftf rom thelr vijtjm. I shall always
i.-.r d.stingtitsneu guc?i rPmeniber. In declnir.g IUCB overtures
that I am an ho.iorary meint er oi this organi7Jtion of hones- straightforward, conscientious hold-up men, who would rob only the rich and dlit V. . . sv ime
vide with the por. ai111 1 ""
nait n
and passed it anund. so
TOPIC K QUARTER
ieaaaa TRUTH of QUARTER. Jeawe apok only worl of help and comfort. Review of Christ's Life. It will clarify the minds of tin
icholars to go back to the beginning and construct a (bart showing the principal eregtl In Oartet'i life up to the transfiguration. This (hart tbe teacher may form before the class, then over it, and Mfk the scholars to reconstruct It. In wntinsr. on the spot. In tho arrans'-meni St. -. ens and Uur ton's Harmony has Meg followed: I. Thirty Years Of l'rlv. te Life. 5 B. C. to the ami of 26 A. D. birth. In Egypt. In the temple. It, Opening Events c.f His Ministry. Summer. 20 A. I.. to P:s over, spring. 27 A. D. John the Baptist Ua;ti to. Temptation. First dtsciplea. Plwf mtrai le. Ill Early Judear. Mln! try. Spring
27 a. i).. to i e1 i W V Dl Tem pie cleansed. NMco e n;s At Sychar. IV. First Period of the Galilean Mtnistrv. Pecembi r. 17 A. P.. to early
-ummer. 28 A. P. Ma in prison
jeced at Naaretb. First pr. a inng tour. V. Second Period of the Call lean Ministry. Early swnster, 2S A. D. to Passover, pprinc '.0 A. D The tw lve choei B
Hernie n on the HOeai u;- ut. Jesus and the Sabbath (LlMUM II ). Second prtacbin.- loof. Widow's son at Kala Letewi In Simons hou- I L -son IV.). Parables by the sea t Lessons V. TL) r.adarene demoniacs (Ix-son Lib). Third pre; chins tour. Twelve sent fottl; niiti ; killed (Lessen
PIMIII Wv M- ' nit). . Fe ling of the five thousand 'Lesson DL). m ,,, VI. Third Period of the Galilean Ministry. From the Passover, spring 29 A. P.. to November. 29 A. D. The Syrophenician woman (Lsoi X.). Four thousand fed. lVt r's confes-ion (Iesson XI.). The triinfimiration tl-son XII.). Th3 "Miradss and Pr,rab!cs" Rev.ew. Most of our quarters lessons are .t.- rr i:..rabie -. (II V
M It scholar a copy of the IgUtMWI list of questions:
1. What was tli mira.ie i--ble)? 2. What does M rhow of Chri t ? character? 3. What lesson had it for Christ a Immediate hearers? 4. What Ksson has It for us. Ask the scholars to come preps re I to answer these questions for each of the nine mira-bs and paral-Vs we have studied, and to apply the uu.stiona also to tbe other three lessons, so far as they are appropriate. Bookn-From wbat C.ospel were the . . ..mhf.r nf taaae k) sauna tak n.
mit'-1 . Which Gospel reports mo.-t fully Je- . .. aiMitttT Give
mis Sermon on vu titles of the leasons that are found in
fUUjyins ii'
AMERICANS ARE PAINT USERS It baa been remarked that the An.encin peoplo consume ni-r. palut, bot .i m tho aggregate and per capita. than anv otln-r neoplo in tho world.
In a rec ntly published article ou the aubjvet it was figured that our yearly ; consumption la over 1 W.OOO.uoo gallons of paint.i of all kinda, of which ovi r one half in used In the pu.i. tings of housea. The reason for this great consumption is twofold: a large proportion , of our buildings, especially In small towns and rural districts, are constructed of wood, and we, as a people.
an given to neatness and cleanliness. For. take it all in all. there la nothing so clAtnly or no sanitary as paint Travel where wo will throughout the country, everywhere we lind tbe neat, cheerful painted dwelling, proclaiming at once the pn sperity and the self-respect of our population. Fifty years ago this was not so: paiati d dwellings, while common in the larger cities and towns, w- re tbt exception in the rural districts; because, on the one hand, a large proportion of those buildings were temporary makeshifts, and, on the other hand, because paint was then a luxury, expensive and difficult to obtain
in the out-of-the-way places, and requiring special knowledge and much preparation to fit It for use.
The introduction of ready mixe.i or
RULE OF THE PEOPLE. Voters of the Country Can Unmake Trusts and Corporations and Control Them. Washington, in bis farewell addr"W said the basis of our co'.'lx ul s ttera waa. -the right of the people to uiaka and unmake. ' The truMs and corporations have been created by the state, therefore the power that made them has the powr to control and en to unmake tin m. As long as corporalona confine their operations to le ultimate ends for mlnimiiug the cost Of production and marketing and reducing the price of their products, or transportation, they are a blessing. Hut now when the corporations restrain trade and combines are created to AefeM competition and control legislatures and courts and pay of their ill-gotten lialns to elect presidents, they violate the laws and botoe a menace to a free people. The trusts and corporations have almost univcrsially become criminals and In league with the dominant political party they divide the spoils of which they have plundered the people. Laws, such as the tariff, have been so distorted that instead eif. as originally intended, furnishing money to run the government, they now plunder the many to enrich the few. Is it any wonder that the people
are universally demanbn that these
prepared paints, about 1800, changed ovt-rgrown trusts be curbed and the
iriy i the entire aspect of affairs. As the
. Jack-of all-trades told the WBdaf
Del. gate In one Of Octave Thant I atories. "Anyone can slather paint." The insurmountable difficulty with our predecessors was to get tbe paint ready for "slathering.'' That tbe country was ready for paint in a conraoient popular form is shown by
charges of the railroad corporations be regulated? To say that this cannot be done is to put these combine above ail law and superior to the sovereign power of the state and the people. Under the Republican policies, which have fostered these giant cor.i 1 have aid- -I 'hem in es-
tk ixnnvliate success of the Lulus- t.iM,.-hiug a modern feudal system.
try ana its phenomenal growth in 50 years from nothing to Co. "00,000 gallons the estimated output for
which is difficult to overthrow, the
cost of living has advanced 40 per cent., ami the cry from the people ; for relief is overwhelming. Perne
Some pretty severe things have cratic statesmen foretold this resu'
written AlKi.it and said asalnst and for years have .j. mannen mm u a
be n
this class of paints, especially by people be preserved from these plun-
,!. rcrs by wise restrictions, oui i it e h for the almighty dollar blinded the e;es of a majority of the voters for a time. Now. most of them aro to mine asraln to the Democratic pol-
i( i. s. for the bur.b n of the trusts and
painters and manufacturers of certain kinds of paste paints. Doui tiess in many Instances thee strictures have been justified and some fearfully and wonderfully constructed mixi. in tlio nnt hern worked
oK on the guileless consumer In the corporations is intolerable, but .t is shaoe of prepare ! paint. Put sue u no e asy task to undo the harm that products have Lad their short da lias been don- and prevent it in tne
licfclv disantK-ared. and the t.J- f-.tute. wut me peoioe .v
ness. this old man. simple as a child, j dav ,f our country goea to the dogs.
and yet foxy as the worn goes enis ,
ark who is told that the uinss-
orus st 111 exists, and believes it. and j
comes to t hia valley to find it. ii
Th Robbers Guided Us in tha Dark Thtough th. Valley.
ha, been such a decent prisoner, and , aome one told him th. t Adn and Eve ha l been such good company, and had . wers j 111 al e . an 1 r In a a nek
-uch a help in dlggin the hul.ets ran. , .
WOUIU l).-lier ii. .!
all his
inlng In a distant
. n n rannnt tliilft of-
SO a respeciaine man - flee or do business on the square, to come back here and become ore of you in fact, and wort the game to the limit. If vou And you cannot make it pay out here, come east and I will give you the Hie 1M mont and the shell game concession with our show next summer, where you can make good living out of the Jays that patronize us. and always hive a little money left when w? get throitch with them.
which it is a shame tor mem iu i-
lowed to carry home BTttT tne even in i I . -.. mn' l(i.
performance, l tuirs ju. I men."
Then the loving cup TC PMBSO, we .ad.Hed our horses and the lOMMM us In the dark through the val
ley and 0l towards the railroad pa'a
.Mlet.TCS filled with U
money. At laylicht the nc-xi mor..... when the guides left us. pa lAOfe a big roll of bills out of his saddlebags and opened U and. y I P. If it 'aan t lot of old onfe lerate MflMf that wasn't Ort a Ms. Pa MM mm words that made me sick, an I then cried. So did pa.
and qu
enterprising manufacturers that pro duced them have cenae to grief in Use bankruptcy courts or have Merged by costly experience that j hone -st v is the beat policy and have.
reformed their ways.
The chief exceptions to this rule : are some mail order nouses who sell direct to the country trade, at a very low price frequently below the wholesale price of liuseed oil. The buyer of such goods, like the buyer of a "gold brick." has only himself to , blr.mc if he finds his purchase worthless. With gold selling at any bank or mint at a fixed price, owners of gold do not sell it at a discount j and with linseed oil quoted everywhere at 50 to 70 cvnts a gallon, manufac turers do not sell a pure iinsccd oil paint at 30 or 40 cents a gallon. The composition of prepared paints
differs because paint experts have not yet agreed as to the best pigments and because the daily results of tests on a large scale arc constantly Improving the formulas of manu
facturers; but all have come to the conclusion that the essentials of good
1-
lug and thorough Incorporation, and
In these particulars ail the producta of reputable manufacturers corre
spond; all first class prepared painia are thoroughly mixed and ground and
the liquid base is almost exclusively-
pure linseed oil, the necessary vola
tile "thinners" and Japan dryers
a .Ul -ir- !. . -
can unmake ana in-eiai can I e revoked, and w ill be, when the voters elect honest representatives in state and nation who will return to the good old demexrratic pl'r' ' Equal rignts to All.
.. 1...1 .Ks. ihn crane was
Ü ... ... Z Ith mit tak- as a secret that Ndomon in
..ina io iei us . - - . . - " ..... .. .nin. tn t orv was n.acer m
;lC!n .r r;Z ÖMhel .o- over the mountains, he would
Kane and divide the money
secured in the last hold- up with us.
they had rush off to engage Solomon to Mrt
a chariot next year in nm snow, cuv-u . . . . . v. ihlnai that are
. .. , . . . 1 n,j 11 pr v nil 'i
ir-.,v- -Enternrise in Mexico.
In Mexico." said .1 M. Hughes of Louis. "I me: hustling and enter
prise American everywhere, -uiu-Yrov is almost a Yankee town a.d an eviden.e of Its progress Is the H ItwUon of a H5.OW.00O steal plant in the State of 0MM.III I cari.e acroa
who had a-quirei -". i
ake bim a mult imt:u nairs
St
a man
.1.1.. ' 1 m
SO'." . Unit
.tte Of 4 .".V"' I. '"
worthless, yet wnun w
but he said there was a stronc
in the east apalnst truly go. d-peoP1?
lik himilf taklne tainted
anr whil he would not want to make where we
romnarison between
i. n inlour to
business or highway robbery, he hoped 1
feellne suspicious of each other, should be en
..meed This old man comes to oui
money, quiet valley, where all la peace, arm lJ 0u towarj the Pa I He
are honest, iresn iron. " '"7 . . rnPn,rr United States
an
.AU.lV
n i o We a vast amount of rub . . He Kot the property f-r 1
nd 'he runt er win -
say that It will last five or ten years. The longer a paint lasts the longer he will have to wait for the Job ol repainting. The latter consideration has no weight with the consumer, and the former is a false idea gj
T . ... t jk ...Mnr la H COSSl I e 1
,o methods wicKeti wor u Z'r office.
n adorn to secure tainted money, in ence res,. . ' , , , osas plant
. S t 1. ..." t- Wllfl 1' S .1 IJV ' t fl HIHII' U r
.ai r. " . . . rniial to
. nf1-,r, tti, bad an laeaaesea J. Crt plantation .hat he toll Mi On,UKr ' . ... nrnHlllCtlve
hualr.ess or h'.ghwav ronner v. hp huw-i - . .,., w. equal the pang to which ha had been elected is seldom convicted and alwaa i re- w" eq 0 raised his cane ; , honefran member would not insist Tr.ed while w-e w -he on ly . - don- ofl an , there was otihta carrying away any of th. taint- fÄfc 52" '
"I money.
You are ail runt in ui"o. o..u w,
a . . . - ni . vja i 1 1 iii m in in ....
UUl " " "
collection, ar. looked upon as m. n
. - . a r l . . . ,t
man." said me n-saer i o rn.:inn in more re
thl. money which might b.ve been - -"' - 3 tne mnn whl, n tahen ll was fh Dl'c l by OX sptciHO.r-
press from Wall stiset to the fsr west
haa t.,en purified by paaa.ng inmugn ' . .h widovr and
our bands, where It ha. been carried "JJ" !wrhou.e. M h o. otet Boeatala ranges cn pack horses, orphan go ' h , tn v.. a. .in .v t.ino.l erm 'U-fT ..f a sivlniM banK n .
" hi ivui ti . a an - . v . . A
L. .. u-wn away. Now. ws pro- '
On Funny Thing
ralvin-I maintain that women have
t ,,Vp Whv are wc
flospels at cmce?
mmmm 1 In what province in
. la.i - - -cu i- i COncitlMOII mat ill' - OeHlM do we see Jesus In these MM e flne grm sons Where did he preach tue &er hnro.ich Incorporation, ar
monon the Mount? Is.on 1gU J.sus work his first mlra-le of raising the dead' bes-on 3. 2. r rem what pulpit did Jesus deliver a sermon made up wholly of parables, tnn r, 3. From what place waa Jesus urgpd to depart' Lesson T. Wbere was John Ike Baptist put to leMT Lesson 8. 4. Whet distant regions did Jeus visit? UM 0. 11 5 On what mountain, probably, was Jesus transfigured? Lesson 12. Persons -6. Who charged Jesus and his disciples with breaking the Sab bath? Lesson - 'hat Gentlb a stowed great faith In Jesu? T ona 3 MX 9. Ybo supplied to Jesus what the discourteous Simon neglecti i Mwa (ntrroutflii
ed? Lesson 4. wawi wmmmmZZ
n Jehus' parabbs so tnat taw) "-s-to understand them? Lesions o. 6.
Who. In the country or tne i.a...e..e,.
wa? healed by Jesus:
I. Who slew Jonn tne
M ft Who incited mm to u swi Who made tbe great confessions ol Christ? LlMllO IL 10 Wn0 w,t' nesaed Jsus' transfiguration? Les ion 12.
Teahlngs.-ll. To what have we .id special attention in this quarters
essonsT 41.'" 1 ' '"i " 1 as men's verdict about the words e.f CUSt Quarters Golden Tett. IS Wbat did I.MM teach by the Mory of the Two Foundations? Oolden Text Lesson L Mk What did .lean a teach ahont the weekly Sabbath? Usson 2 15. How did Jesus one ,tat. his authority over death" Golden Text. L-son 3. 1. With xhat words did Jesu comfort a sin ul but penitent woman? Colder
Text. Lesson 4. Golden Thoughts. We t"ay lrop our buckets Into empty ells bt they will cauaj no strain on the windlass. . i.a ll.KAman
Where no nsn are m- u.,.... whip the water In vain. W c need an armor for the csmp aa well as for the conflict Tb man who goes through Ufa 1 . . . in v.
UV. an excuse on nis ups pumfi
EVILS OF REPUBLICANISM. System of Mergeis and CombLuea Tends to Coirupt Political Morals. The economic effects of the present system of mergers and trusts is uneN.ubtedly deplorable; but the .-yem pn duces other results still more d 1 nr.. Me Ft, as Juelge Gayn..r. of New York, said the other day. it not only exploits th se gre.it gilts, those fnnihises which are nothing but licenses from the people, and makes hem a drain on the community, by ling bonded and the rtock doubled ' up year after year until the mm has bcei.me colossal enough and dishonest enough to shock the moral sense of the peep': Mat beyond and worse than this Is the effect of Its Inherent vltiousness upon politics, which it tends t.i corrupt; upon democracy, which it tend- to undermine by weakening pub:ic confidence; upon the good will which should exist between fellow citireris tn self-government. Refarrtee to the existing political
I :-e-e
i ..rest. Judee Gaynor aald
"thinners ano japan uryer. Bi.,.atloIl, ror muni. ipal ownership and .iÄ nunicipa, -nage-
products Is based largely on self In
fer St
. . m I. ....I.I A.iinrr 1
nimse ii ana u ; tr. rrlvioe m.inaa-ement of public scrv-
au ' ss .tivM w
Is no recommendation for a paint to
. w . n mv niiieriieni iri-eu
He wants to mix the paint mmm - or
r.oi oui 01 " .
I . n . i,.n Tho eonimunltv an-
,(f CU(IUI.UVHB- - -- not look without feeling, without reeret. without deep resentment, and, bnallv. without action, to the doubling up of capital, the trebling of capital pot Into these public franchises, representing neithing but a perpetual tax on th( community."
eeonnmv. Hand labor can never be
as cheap or as efficient as machine work and every time the painter The Protective Idea. mixes pnlnl. did he but know It, he Kc presentat lve Charles Bejry Lmdla is losing mone y, because ho can buy , madt a speoi h on the tariff the other a better paint than he can mix at ay. and used probably the only argulon than It ceists bim to mix It. rnrnt that ce.ulel win a vote in favor of
Prepared painta have v. on. not only
on their actual merits, but on their convenience and economy. They are comparatively cheap and tbey arc in- ' comparably handy. Hut when all is said, the experienced painter la the proper person to apply even a ready , mixed paint. He hnows better than
nnvono lse the "when' and how
the stand-patters and prote. ti .nl ts t urbons. Hut It did not relate at all to the question of revising the tariff. He exclaimed with preat dednma- ! n effect: "Four members of the Londts family met their death on ut hern battle fields." "Yea." said John Sharp Williams. - 1 . m. ,h.l
but four of tnem remain u .e ... ..
I the difference between painting eMMtff In offices of public trust.
. v.... , lim, tiiirmi nn'e
. ... . k. rn MnM oi ami" J -
of really funny
3d
h ti
. . a-
. nh I I'nn t Know. ik
how popular Chol'y Nitwit 1 LhctB. - Clevt '.and L-fdor.
let
bly go Into eternity with a lie in his Kverv man of manly Instinct hon- . m.nlv man. hot even a sneak
rtr 'nr. p nieftk in his iNtft WfaMOf
afsjgwrtrtMOk
aa
and "slathering" Is much greater
than It appears to a nv cc every
one to his trade, and after all paint
ing is the painter's trade and nut the
householder's. Lloyd George, now a MBgtMt l f Bsl
British cabinet, was nanreain
meeting in Wales, and uIj e.iairran . - . . . 1
said. "I haff to introduce you io u.
member of Carnarvon boroucri. Me has come here to reply to whu the bishop of St. Aaaph aald the other night about Welsh dlaeitabll-hment In my opinion. genMemen. the blsh 'P of St. Asaph 1 one of the blggett liars In crettlon: but hs hass hla match In Lloyd George." Best Ee Could 8v. "What do von think of these pek a boo shirtwaists the girls are wta:. ing?" , . "Well, tey,e nlmoit flo'nea -UMMtUN Courler-JourniL
And every tKMly laugneo. ior iw U.ndises are members of coneress. on. la s federal Judge in Chicago, and on. ra dim-tor of posts In Peirto Klco. , Moreover, Charles Beary Landis haa lust appointed his son to West
;dnt.
The Rex-kefeller hank, through h. connivance ..f the Republicans of he appropriation committee, will main collect rental of Uncle Sam for he New York custom houee, which iaa never been paid for. The mills of the gods grind very dowlv. but eventually are said to) rind exceedingly small. Thus after uht or nine Ionic years the truth out embalmed bod Is HV.'.y to be sown and If the ndmmist ration does a duty without fear the mlalmere ay be fed to the hopper tK Üe aal ennrts.
