Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 104, Hammond, Lake County, 19 October 1911 — Page 4

THE TLUE3.

Thursday, Oct. 19, 1911.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING TKiB GAIIY EVEMXQ TIMES EDITION. THE LA KB COVHTT TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK. EDITION, TBI LiKB COUHTY TIMES EVENING EDITION AND THE TIMES SPORTING BXTM, ALL DAIL!r NEWSPAPBR3, AND THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES SATURDAY AND WEEKLY EDITION, PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.

The Lake County Times Evening Edition (dally except Saturday and Sunday) "Entered ar, second class matter February t 1911. at the, poatoffie at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress. March I, 1S79." The Gary Evening Times Entered as second class matter October I. 1109. at the pojto'fice at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress, March t, 1178." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as second classmatter January SO. 1911, at the poatofflce at Hammond, Indiana, vnder the act of Corgress, March 3. 179. " MAIN OFFICE HAMMOND, IND., TELEPHONE. Ill II. EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR TELEPHONE MS. GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BLDG, TELEPHONE 1ST. BRANCHES EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WHITING, CROWN POINT, TOLLESTON AND LOWELL.

YEARLY HALF YEARLY 8 1 NO LB COPIES LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION

PAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION.

CIRCULATION BOOKS

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION TIMES.

TO SUBSCRIBERS Reatfera mt THE rnarit kT rrMrtlu t Irregularities

ClreiUaUoB. Drpartmot. ' COMMUNICATIONS.

THE TIMES will prlat all (mmaalcsttaai vbjecta of IM"J lateraat

te the people, when such cemnsmlcatloM sure lamed by the writer, bat will reject all amnaitii net algaed, n nutter what thei terlta. Tbla a re

ran tin m la taken ta avoid mlsTeareaeatatl THE TIMES U pnbllaaea la the beat

aaeea alwaya iateaded la aresaata the sreaeral welfare of the yablte at larae.

THE INNOCENT ARE THEY WHO SUFFER. When the guilty are punished it Is the innocent who suffer.

To no one does this come with who print newspapers. There is not rVcA tima .nH ooiiin hu ha n trni ai These appeals are generally made by fering mothers or heart-broken sisters.

to pitifully importune while their hearts are breaking and burning tears

rhokn them make them the most Bathetic of figures.

Tn the citips of the Calumet retdon TVia Inra that naiw: linrlprRtnndins- and . pressing to face. In one instance a critical condition because her son has .'row path, while a sister pleads for him .onr.oi,. In Kli. To annthoi- r-asa a "i i'v " - t ..... . . a daughter whose associations have case, a father, wife, mother, sisters and they bear. Their suffering racks him walls, the path to whose inside is pitiful stories told in every newspaper v..-.,.. muuy eturitfs ai niuuiy nciuuitru auu would amaze the world, : - MUCH CAPITAL

That Hammond's claim to the distinction of being the financial center of

the region has some foundation in fact projects that have been successfully following will give something of an abeorbed in Hammond in the present

Employes' Life and Casualty Insurance Co i...$100,0u0 Lincoln-Jefferson University 100,000 Hammond Country Club 65,000 Hammond & Suburban Realty Co 50,000 Hammond Steel Barrel Co 50,000

Total '.. Only $40,000 worth of stock In addition to the above mentioned

In Hammond there are a dozen smaller concerns which have either been I

financed here or have increased their surplus or tne community has gone

J 1 t Ml? t . ita . I

J " ..mwu uuwuio There is little wonder that money ent time. It is expected, however, that will have l.PPn created which will h nave iue greaiesi mianciai resource.

that the position of financial strength is due in so small measure to the I conservatism and ability of its bankers who have considerable influence I

on the investing public. THE FRONTIER

The attack upon the Sister Superior of St. Margaret's hospital while

she was leaving the criminal court shock the community. That such an' hold of our law courts is significant tain element which the community cago Tribune, Slugging and shooting

lence aeainst a venerable ivnmnn whnw rh ,h ,..,, a

...ov. hurt, prove a condition thar almost tee of the frontier. It is, in fact, the the law should be extended over It - aft

DESERVES THE PENALTY.

A Jury ln Lake county has found has affixed the death penalty. His

for he butchered a young woman under circumstances that were absolutely

revoltinsr. He was stinwn tn l.oi an' lingering spar ot mannooa, says tne paused sentence and it is sincerely to out. Governor Marshall alone stands cation of the law, and it is hardly of Governor Hanly and arrogate to of the commonwealth. AT THE Lake County Medical a doctor in private conversation said wallop a boy with a thick strap.

years too late to do us any good, however.

.ONE

. .919 CENT THAN ANY OTHER NEWS AT ALL TIMES are renrarted tarr tie suala AellTertag. Ce i aiiaicsrte with the a. laterwt ( the aeaaJe, sad Ita attermore striking emphasis than to those a newspaper editor whose lieart Is not prt nsltintr fnr th Riinrtrpsslrm nf news I ratient and lons-suffering wives, sufThe iact mat tney nna u necessary instances are constantly recurrent. nnnrs out in these anneals is dia- I mother lies prostrate in her bed in wandered from the straight and and the wife refuses for shame to mnthc, hari hoi- fiiifTfHn C nnl f nr I

beenxmore than wild. In still another

babe plead for him, whose disgrace far more than the thought of prison easy and the pace rapid. There are office that remain a secret and how v ssxtxuj eveu v c -u uy lur iicr aaao I : ABSORBED. is indicated by the large number of financed in the last few months. The idea of investments that have been year: Capital Stock. 7 $365,000 sold here. companies which have been floated I capital stock. This absorption of the on mspite ot the Iact that Hammond uunuiub j ii . i seems to be rather tight at the presby next spring that a new surplus j rpadv to ro int ntWr nw i. tui tne iaci snoum De Overlooked OF BARBARISM. - . building in Chicago on Monday will offense could occur at the very threstestimony to the lawlessness of a cer-J must find a way to deal, says the Chi-1 and now this niece of cowardlv vfo . .w, uu uuuirns oi. puyeiuai justifies resort to the vigilance commitfrontier of barbarism, and the arm of with more vigor. - George Davis guilty of murder and crime was a particularly hellish one nlionrirtneri -n.-otv, ar,A iuwui. o rort Wayne News. The Court has be hoped that it will be duly carried between the murderer and the vindi

thought that he will follow the example himself authority to upset the statutes

society banquet in Gary the other night that he thought it was a bad thine- to The doctor's discovery comes twentv

RANDOM

THINGS AND FLINGS WELL, have you bad any "brown i October ale" yet? "WHO killed the franchise?" "I," said, (Oh, fill It In yourself.) THE motto of the trana-Atlantlc aviator seems to be "Fly, Fly, Again." - v DOES ex-Chief Albert Lewis simply go around hunting for trouble all the time? , ' . HOW some men can live on bo email a capital as their wits la un known. NICK LONGWORTH says Taft will be the next republican nominee with out a doubt. Yea, but well. A PRETTY soon we shan't have to keep track of what kind of liniment Matty uses. THIS Ruzsie-Lamb business cre ates a worse nausea than seasickness. ft EASTERNERS are excited over the "blowing off" of a whale on the coast. Who's absent from the Calumet re gion? THERE are some sots who will load up so much they try to kiss the bartender, but they would never think of kissing their wives. -ft THE elimination of one or two banks will never hurt Gary. It will only be a case of the survival of the fittest. PERSIAN insurgents have Inst a battIe Ge,f ltB har(J to watcn aI1 (the rings in the world's circus at once I WHIT'S in a namo? Mnn. T,. ' bonnet Is an eminent balloonist. He ought to be a good one wlth a name nar-hike that. PERHAPS We are going into the PERHAPS we are Ideas of November without any plaint about the shortage of the turkey croD. gQ mote It be. v - THE attack on the gentle executive "r 1,,ardrei " nospiiai Dy "l naggers ,s oniy in Keeping wHh nttnlra rn little o-lvlo ACTUALLY Judge Anderson of the federal court condescended for once to eat his lunch in Hammond. It is impossible to predict any result. A SENATORIAL toga was worth 200,000 in the Stephenson case. But the figure has not been found out in the mysterious eight case charged by iKern against Shively. THE dictograph is getting so com mon now that If you have anything about them, you might as well take it from the top self and have It ready for use. 4V HAVING been indorsed for the presidency by a handful of republic an8 n Chicago, we shall be interested ,n eelng iust how far LaFollette gets I WICU It "iflfrift ruoolliLi x tne taxi-can that -von a found in West Hammond broke down because It was afraid somebody would Btrt mandamus or Injunction proIceedings against it. MASSACHUSETTS mnn hna brought suit for a board bill twenty yeai"8 old. There's a relentless enemy. 'What a biscuit shooter he could make. SO far the high school football sea son ln Lake county has been extremeiy lucky. No skulls have been fractured rib- ,njury box flCore - about the same as it was last year at this time tUJifLAlftT Is made by some that Governor, Wilson started on his pres! ential campaign too earlv. Don't think so. It will take auite a few months to kiss 15,000,000 babies and hand out about 20,000,000 campaign cigars. SARAH Bernhardt has acted before a cinematograph and exhibitions of tb-e divine Sarah In Jerky lights and dark BPlotchea win soon appear ,ollel e'iu Dont you mean tights Instead of lights? A REASON why. the cost of living is high Is advanced by Johnny Wheel er of the Star as follows: "The majority of stout, able-bodied men would sooner risk their lives In going up in a baloon or flying machine for a small Prize, than to go into a field and cut corn' or neIp at harvest time. tThat tbe .r!.aEIl Prk and beanS COStS 80 this.

The Day in HISTORY

1622 Peace of Montpelier, ending the Huguenot wars. 1630 -Ktrst general court In America "held at Boston. IH5 Jonathan Swift. the famous author of "Gullivers Travels," died. Born Nov. 30, 1667. 1781 British army under Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown to the American army . and Frencn allies under General Washington and Count Rochambeau. 1833 The Baptists In Chieago organized their first church. 1848 Mormon Temple at Nauvoo, 111., destroyed. 1850 First national convention of the Woman's Suffrage Party met In Worcester, Mass. 1864 The timely arrival of General Sheridan turned the tied of victory in favor of the Federals at battle of Cedar Creek. 1910 Massachusetts Democrats nominated Conressman Eugene N. Foss for governor. "THIS IS MY 41ST BIRTHDAY" Thai-lea p. t'rlap. Charles P. Crisp, the parliamentary clerk in the national houe of repre sentatives, was born in' Georgia, Oc tober 19, 1870, the son of the late Charles F. Crisp, who was Speaker of the house In the Fifty-second congresses. He comes of English stock and of family of actors, the late Speaker Crisp beig the only one of his generation who was not on- the stage. The son receved a liberal education and was parliametary clerk to his father when the latter served as Speaker. Upon the death of the elder Crisp the son was eleeted to fill the unexpired term as representative. When his term expired he resumed the practice of law and for en years he was judge of the county court of Schley county, Georgia. When the Democrats gained control of the house at the last election Mr. Crisp was appointed to his old position of parlia mentary clerk. j Up and Down in INDIANA WOCXDS WILL PROVE FATAL The- sheriff yesterday began summon ing witnesses ' for the grand Jury investlatlon of the killing of his wife and wounding of Ralph Hunter by Jessie Freel of Newcastle, Hunter still keeps up a brave front at the hospital, but the paralysis caused by the bullet which lodged under the spinal cord is becoming more noticeable. Physicians say he may live a week or three months, but that his injuries will ultimately cause death. In the meantime, Freel con tinues unconcerned and plays his guitar1 and mandolin at -the Jail, while the other prisoners stag." COMPLAINS ' OF THREATS. Alleging cruel and inhiynan treat ment, Benjamin McCarty of Shelbyvllle, one of the city's most prominent an 1 wealthy citizens, filed suit for divorce from Mrs. Minnie McCarty yesterday afternoon. He says his wife threatened to shoot him and relatives of his former wife If she ever saw him speak to them, and .that she theatened to drown herself and to take poison on numerous occasions. Mr. McCarty declares her actions have undermined his health. He left his home yesterday and had a restraining order served to keep his wife from disposing of their household goods. They were married Oct. 20, 1909. MARIOV MAN SHOT. Word reached Marion j-esterday of the killing of Sumner Baldwin, a Marion young man, who was agent of a col lecting agency, witly temporary headquarters at Montgomery, Ala. He was shot and Instantly killed in a hotel at Uvella, Ga., by a lawyer from whom he was attempting to collect a bill. Baldwin's widow and three children are at Montgomery, Ala., and his mother, Mrs. William H. Lloyd, now lives at Rome City. TRACTION ENGINE EXPLODES. Col. A. P. Asbury, past commander of the Indiana division of the Grand Army of the Republic, was seriously injure at his home yesterday at Farmersburg when a traction engine blew up. Jacob Hauger and Ace Hall, two workmen, received severe bruises. The explosion set fire to a barn owned by Bruce Fox, a Farmersburg agent for the Terre Haute Oil Company, and the barn was destroyed. AIDS TO CAPTURE EMPLOYE. After having been traced to Logans port, Ind., by F. Roy Rigorish, his former employer and druggist, 02 North Illinois street, Indianapolis, Charles Bowlin, clerk, was returned to Indianapolis yesterday and arrested by Blcyclemen Hartsell and Coleman charged with selling cocaine without a prescription. Bowlin's arrest followed the filing of a "John Doe" affidavit by Joseph O. Knoeful of Newf Albany, Ind., an Inspector for the State Board of Pharmacy. The warrant was Issued and blcyclemen sent to the place to arrest the clerk. Rigorish, by mistake was arrested. Later he was released and aided, the police in flndln the guilty party. Bowlin Was released on bond. CROWD THREATENS NEGRO. W iiiiam Hale, the colored man wno attempted to kill Alonzo Varnosdel of Columbus with a razor In jail , was taken through a crowd of five hun dred men and boys and placed on an interurban car yesterday by eight po llcemen. The sheriff then accompanied him to Jeffersonville, where he will serve a sentence for receiving stolen goods. Hale was arraigned for assault and battery with Intent to kill before being taken to prison and was bound over to the grand jury. The crowd which surrounded the Jail when he was removed made many threats, but no efforts to take hfm from the police. DON'T HITCH YOUR WAGON TO A BTAR HITCH IT rO A TIMES' AD AND GET RESULTS THAT COUNT.

HARBOR IS

FIGHTING (Continued from Page L) Indiana Harbor delegates are out ln " i-anvass io gel next year a convention for their city. Indianapolia Is the only other aspirant at the pres ent time. The deles-ates will remain for the session this morning, which wiM conclude the convention. The election of officers and the decision as to tha next meeting place will be part of th? program this morning. Leroy E. Hnyder, secretary of the In dianapolis Trade Association, urged co operation between Indiana cities and towns and advanced as his reason th fact that Indiana municipalities are each required to face and solve many problems that are common. His paper was the hit of the convention. It Is as follows: co-operation is a much overworked work. In the last few years much cheap sentiment and commonplace thinking has been let loose upon the public under the pretext that it pertains to "cooperation." But the word stands 1 for an idea, and this Ideal, or I should! better say Idea, Is that which today anlmates and directs the most promising effort of those who are working for the public good In all quarters of the globe. I feel that this subject, as It relates to us of Indiana, and to tho welfare of Indiana cities, means untold good for the future of, our state. If I may, in some degree, come close to tellin what I feel, I shall be satisfied. Three weeks ago, on the ocaslon of the visit of representatives of the Indianapolis Trade Association to Ft. Wayne, your own Colonel Foster told us that Indiana Is Just now beginning to outgrow its provincialism. That is a statement which must be true If the things we hope for are to be accomplished through the medium of ; this Federation. If I did not believe that It is true, I should not have the courage to plan, even in my mind, for the accomplishment of anything ln Indiana through co-operation. No, provincialism in the sense In which the word is used, does not apply alone to that ignorance of metropolitan methods on the part of the resident of t rural districts the "provinces" which the word originally signified, but It implies a self-sufficiency, a smug self-satisfaction, that Is the more ob noxious the higher in the social or intellectual scale the community may b that holds to It. The insularity of Eng land or of Manhattan island might breed a provincialism much worse In its effect on the progress of culture, trade and commerce than the provincialism of the backwoods or of the broad frontiers of a new country. It was Inevitable that ln.the growth of our State from a wilderness, the Iso lation of pioneer life Involved should engender narrowness of outlook in many ways. It was, If the. expression may be used, a kind of communal egot ism that developed; a pride in one's own things, and, by the same token, a sort of contempt for the things of others, that placed between different communi ties an effectual bar In the way of mutual understanding, respect and help fulness. The man who has lived in one coun try all his life, who has seldom or never left It to see what the rest of the world might be about. Is very apt to feel that his own section has the best farm land, grows the best corn and wheat, the most luscious fruits and the choicest vegetable, and has the clearest brooks and the most picturesque rivers and landscapes, In the whol country, or mayhap, ln the whole world. By a natural mental transition, this pride of local possessions and material things is transformed into an inordinate conceit about local personages, in fact, into an exaggerated notion of the qualities of character and the capabilities of all who compose th local community Other communities, one feels, have citi zens "so different, don't you know,' so peculiar, and altogether no so good, nor so wise, "not quite Just the same sort of folks that we are," in fact. Harry Leon Wilson, in his entertain ing and simulating novel, "The Seeker, says that there was a certain primitive Brazilian tribe in whose language the word for "we" meant also "good", and the word for "others" which was "not we," meant also "evil." "I suppose, says Mr. Wilson's character who is dwelling on this significant fact, "our own tongue Is but an elaboration of that simple bit of human nature a training of politie vines and flowering shrubs over the crude lines of it." Now there is no doubt that we had even a disproportionate share of this kind of provincialism in Indiana, and, of course much of it still survives. But it was largely due to the distances, ln time and space, that separated different communities; to the lack of easy means of communication; to the inability of the primitive Hoosier, for lack of time and means, to travel, to visit other communities and cities, even to get acquainted with towns reasonably close by, except perhaps, on certain rare and holiday occasions. Then, inded, he got such a fleeting glimpse, such an imperfect impression of his neighbors ln another city or town, that he returned to his home more than ever convinced of the other man's peculiarities, his queer traits and habits and more firmly Impressed with his own superiority in numberless ways. The social and economic expression of this mental condition was a fierce rivalry and competition between all sections, all cities, of the State, in all Interests, In social activities and sports, and especially in business and politics. There was a time,' and that no so far since, when It seemed almost as though South Bend would have heard of a great cataclysm of Nature that had destroyed Terre Haute or Loansport in a

FOR 11

Grand Opera Singer

: St - -

i y w. xvr -art- v;

7 ) hit f-,,

Madam Olive Fremstad.

night, with, of course, some natural regret and sorrow, but with a quite patient resignation to the Inscrutable ways of Providence. Then Ft. Wayne, learning from some entirely credible newspaper report that Muncie had discovered ways of evil that by comparison made of the tale of Sodom a gentle lespleasurable congratulation at its own virtue, but felt somehow, don't you know, that It had known this all the time. Then Terre Haute knew, as an absolute certainty, that Evansville had enjoyed a purely accidental growth ln popualtlon, and that, being Just across the river from The South, It was oly a question of a- few years until thts Northern and more energetics "Pittsburgh of the West" would overtake It in a walk, even If going In hobbles and on a pair of broken crutches. Then but need ,1 go on? Those were days when eaph city, town and village had its dearest enemy, when nought goo-d could be said about one that gained the slightest credence in another, but all evil was believed. Then the State, ln short, had but one sentiment in common, and that a precious, dearly cherished. ever active, sleepless antagonism for one city, which sat In the midst of them, ln the darkness of Its isolation on the banks of Pogue Run, and longer for the day to come when it might be held, by the rest of the State, as almost as worthy and deserving of love and respect as Chicago, or Cleveland, or Cincinnati, or Louisville, or. St. Louis. Then the reports of the census were only cause for invidious comparisons or vain excuses, not for common rejoicing ln the general growth of the State. Then commerce and trade brought the cities of Indiana only enmities ' and strife, nlt the mutual respect of thofce who deal honestly and straightforwardly with one another; and all business that could be transacted with the cities that lay around tbe borders of the State was given to thorn, as though In despite of other Hoosier communities that might have profited thereby. Is this picture overdrawn? Do I exaggerate over much? If I do, , you will pardon, for the point is clear. Those were the days of "competition." But we of Indiana have movf-d with the rest of the world. And the rest of the world, whether for god or ill I shall not say (for this Is not a discussion of economics), seems surely and truly to be moving away from competition. Even our millionaires, themselves the product of the competitive system, are beginning to tell us that co-operation must take the place of the fierce strife that has had for Its slogan that timehonored and well-worn cry, "Every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost." And we Hoosiers are beginning to feel the Impulse of cooperation in more directions than it would now be profitable to consider. And natural causes and the conditions of our early history brought about the competitive strife, the Ill-will and antagonisms, the provincialism that went with. It so the conditions of today are bringing U3 naturally to cooperation,' friendliness and good will. The telephone, rural mail delivery, the Interurhan railway, the multiplication and freer circulation of newspapers and Jourffals, an increase of the capacity and the means for travel; the whole movement for closer relations express ed In the growth of fraternal orders, of women's clubs, of young people's so cleties; the increase of church activities and organizations, with their frequent meetings and conventions all these have come. We are getting acquainted, the world is becoming smaller and. by a curious paradox, much larger than it was before--and our State is becoming a close and Intimate thing of which we are a part, one with another. The walls of prejudice, of mistrust and jealousy, are breaking down. This change is in the very fibre of our being. If is a change in the spirit of the State, the sign of the sisterhood of

Who js Divorced

v V v"- - - o "if ' v t i '- j !' :v' 1 M v her cities, of the common brotherhood and purpose and destiny of her citizens. We are beginning to take Joy ln the success of others, It is no longer held as disloyalty for the man of ona city to say that a rival city is beautiful, and public-spirited, and orderly and eecent and law-abiding, the home or civic virtues jid a fit and good place. In which to ,live- A man from a distant corner of the State may even return from a visit to the capital city and express his admiration for its characteristics and the. quality of its citizenship, without Incurring the scorn and arousing the antagonism of his fellow-townsmen. ' ''No man liveth until himself -alone." That Is the social gospel of old. What of the city? Has not every city of Indiana common needs, common problems, common duties to Its citizens and to the State? In the old days of selfsufficiency, a city scorned to look at others, to profit by their experience 'or learn by their example. We know better now. Our cities are children ot the same State, their rights and powers are prescribed by the same statutes, their progress is accelerated by the same intelligence or retarded by the same fatuous stupidity ln legislative halls, the burden's of constitutional Inhibition fall alike on all; all ' must struggle alike for permission to grow and develop, for the granting of the new privileges and perogatives that become imperative as the necessity appears for more and more powers ot home rule. The cities stand or fall together. You may say this Is the purest Idealism. So be it. It is no longer considered . smart to sneer at" idealism, b'lt woe be it to him who permits his idealism to bear fruit only In words, words, and a phantasm of ideas. Then what may we do? .. In general, I venture to say that the Indiana Federated Commercial Clubs, If It so wills, and If it perform the functions for which It was born, may become one of the greatest powers for the advancement of the good, of the State. This is not because the needs of the cities overshadow those of the country, but because the country cannot, in the very nature of things, achieve that unity of effort and perfection of organization which the cities may accomplish. And, perhaps, betore I point out ln what directions our efforts may run, I may suggest some of the things that have actually been done taht Illustrate the interdependency of our cities and the good Ciat may be accomplished by united effort, even without the help of such an organisation as this. The time has passed when one city, asking of the legislature for help in the solution of one of its problem, must be looked upon with suspicion by all of the others, as though. Indeed, In the language of the street. It were trying to "slip one over" on the rest. Tha time should be past when the legislature, at first Indifferent and somewhat annoyed to be bothered about a merely civic matter, than with a bored and preoccupied If not peevish air, finally says, "O, very well. If you 'want It, take it. It can't hurt anybody but yourself. Go ahead and try it." The time should be here, now, when that which is the need of one city, s instantly felt to be the need of all, except in matters peculiarly of local significance. The united action of an organization such as this, when all the cities of the State are made to feel the value of joining in its work, would demand attention serious, thoughtful and deliberate attention from the most preoccupied legislator. And more, it would accomplish that which mu.t always precede legislative action It would educate the public mind, not in one section of the State nlone but in every quarter at the same time. And, in a good ca use, with an educated public "pinion to back it, who can gain say the force and power of such co-opcra-tlor

y' VI

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