Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 43, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 January 1910 — Page 2
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A CORILE UF THE DIG COMPOSING RCON e~
WiCh L are madd n postiMoes o ayver the land Thin takes no scoount of th yenir br pleture poptoasds Walch aYe s Hl in the bnited .?:'N;v‘-u ?;- thee oitHons ey CEY Vanr. E SREee Loy I Sothhe ciicial ahour theas {uktratod postontds. They do net bear on their fnee az do fodern] posteodrds a stadnp entitling theny 1o trans tission through the mabls, and such souvenir card is car icd in the malle oply ahen a anecent staip 18 affixed to 1 Coumaguently it 18 the enormous swie ing of the sales of oßecent stmps and ot the expansion of the guvernmental posteard trade that indicntes the enormous and widespread popuiarity of the souvenir posteard fad in recent vears = : - The postiaster general 18 golng to pay upward of a niiiiion doliare for the posial cards which will he issued to the patrons of our postal svetem between now and New Yenr day, 18015, However, this new contract is char acterized by svveral features of great interest sside from the large amount of xzus:n'-x represented . Foreniost among these is the fact that Unele Sam is, .in efect, coniract ing to suppiy bhimeelf with postal cards of bis awn mant facture. Heretofore all the postal cards required in this country have been turned out by private manufacturers and. indeed, for years past, the manufacture of postal cards has been the principal industry of the little city of Rumford Falls, Me Henceforth, however, the government will print its postal cards at the great government printing office in \\'ns!m:gt(fin. the largest printing piant in the world, : _The postoflice department will continue to pay for the postal cards, just as it dfd when they were obtained from private manufacturers, but the process will amount to Uncle Sam tiking money out of one pocket and put ting into another. At the sdme time the government will save money by the new plan of obtaining its post card supplies. 1t has been realized for some time past by the postotice officials that it would be a great conwvenience if the government could print its own postal cards at Washington (theé point from which they are distributed to all parts of the country) instead of havfng them manufactured in Maine, with the consequent toss of time in sending them to Washington for distribution. The government had bmwn by vears of practice that it could produce its postage stamps and its paper money more cheaply than if the work were given to outsiders, and accordingly Postmaster General Hitchcock, who is a live business man, determined to see if a similar saving, combined with more efficient service, could not be effected in the case of the postcards. The government printing office submitted competitive bids on the same basis as its outside rivals and it underbid them all. ' - . A second important feature in connection with the new contract for postal cards is found in the fact that this new deal contemplates cards of better quality than have heretofore been in use. Especially will there be a marked improvement in the surface of the card and this will enable it to take ink more readily. In future, probably, there will be few complaints from people who are
HAVE SPENT MUCH ON ABBEY
Cost of Restoring Westminster Has Been a Heavy Charge on Church Authorities. The cost of keeping Westminster abbey in repair is a very onerous and delicate one and the long line of surveyors of the fabric is a distinguished one indeed, writes a corresporident of the Church Family Newspaper. During the last 70 years this matchless
}.E[jmmcu: SAM ZOPRINT =IS OWN POSTAL <
ging the pen while Y ats LR Tiy & 5 s ‘fi% O ‘ ee W s PRI Tl ‘afi‘«;;‘q,@, el sl "}»*~s§s§ Ik on-the P £ Riae Mmm o awfi card wilt be o memfimmfi x b Hahier s welght and @@umflflfl . T sby ilgnte 14 misrhap m“m”» %3 15 B ¥ for e aidres and marh for Uncie Sam haa to pay foi jgmggeggrr st G sontofon *@‘Mi eY - e ation of 8l pisle Lend Lr B g vEIERMS B e rde Wil mvwwmr Ipave *’m - ’?’f they ake, mww“mqwf fi%*i’ LT o¥ redch flfl"% ek to e office untfl the; Sdre Tienerai iitchooek t _ i _,x Py s 5 of ’3{;%’&&*’%&? e {fi m@%”é . r%%g}gxbm e . g{,;m{mmpfil&m {Bs eone i?fifmgvfi. earde more wrtist . %gwtm’mwwfim 2 e [L i ey HARGNEE S ;mfi"mmflm iy - i‘»fiufi&fi«v i ket wnal he fi«““\ dek in which o dniries, sud W Aor of fhe lsk o whic - %iafi*;% &M Toer what tinis and mmm*m“*mfi 2 fi%figfifi 107 wcheme cannol Lng e e L HGr R e A e L eg s mmde e hree diffirent slzes fente Base boen e will be f‘fifl*‘ifimflzzxxswm e sew sl it will pebel Gl BE B i Rel pecils wiliw
CEREE vears and whicn Pustal eard o means A There will also
Hew soyle postal Business men #}fig “yew . eard) %m‘ the stand #rd “card index” mrf},ét FOWewhat . miafim\ postal wx%nnd s agd @fifiifig&“ is found in the fact that it
can be filed with UL trimming or trouble in any eard index fle or cabi net. This will make the new sivie card the handiest finaginable vehijcle for announcement of '{srwv guota tions, bulletins of all kinds, reports- as for iustance the datly reports of traveling salésmen, eto Lnder the new system of postal card manufacture the work will not be so cdncentrated as at present Under the plan now in wvogue all the operations of manufacture, from the process of cutting down the forest tress and reducing them to paper to boxing up the completed postal cards for shipment, {s carried on in the little Maine city, where about %00 men are employed, in one wWay or another, in posteard manufacture. Under the neéw echeme the government will buy the raw material, notably the paper or cardboard and the ink, but all the operations of postecard manufacture will be carried on in the great printing office under the shadow of the United States capitol, where 5000 men and women are regularly employed. A contract that calls for the delivery of between two million and three milllon complete postal cards every working day in the year would swamp the biggest private printing plant in the country. but this new responsibility has been treated as merely an incidental at the model printery of the world. The force will have to be increased somewhat and perhaps some new printing presses will be installed—although the officials say the work can be handled with the equipment now in place. - The government has drawn with great care the specifications for the paper to be used for the new postal cards with a view to obtaining a grade of material with longer fiber than that heretofore in use and presenting a better surface for writing in ink. The paper will be delivered to the government printing office in 600-pound rolls, -each containing the material for 90,000 cards, and the printing will be done on presses each of which will reel off 3,000 sheets of postal cards per hour, each sheet being made up of 100 separate cards. It can thus be figured that each press can print upward of one-third of a million postal cards per hour, and since several such presses can be employed if necessary and the government printing office is in operation night and day, there
- church has been in the hands of Mr. Blore, Sir Gilbert Scott, Mr. Pearson, Mr. Michaelthwaite and now Prof. Lethaby. There have been times in the history of the abbey when its very ex‘istence has been in jeopardy. The first of these occurred about the end ' of the seventeenth century. Sir Chris- | topher Wren was called in and the lwork of restoration was carried out
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AR 0 B N e e (| i & e o l £ : s)‘ + :{ % w,&g ; b *:" “b b : 0 it TR TRY . S || e ) R (it L E RNy | Swwan g TR TS | Vel | e eV| :i ~ k ¢ :‘ b -' ’x fl;@w A&;: r I IT\ kL T A A 21 ;! 7 ’éf — f esE | o . : : ' Leg PN - — § ‘% :3s= | O o N,.V 3. : ' J !‘l vf? 2 "b:‘ :-"‘ : ’el ;,“j: 1 S : l THE PRIVATE HOSPITAL IN THE GOVERNMENT FRINTING OFf7CE
fwlth the utmost meal and thorough}ness.' though in meny of its details its | taste- was open to much gquestion. f When the late Dean Bradley ari rived upon the scene in the year 1382 ‘he found an income derived largely [from agricultural estates steadily ;dwmdllng in value, while the condii tion of many of the great flying but- | tresses as well as the north transept ! was indescribable. The late Dean himiself was wont frequently to describe the north tramsept when he first inspected it as presenting almaost
the possibile dishonesty of emploves (n the manpufacture, packing and disiribution of postal eards. For one thing, the presses used for printing the cards will be controiied by an Intricate svstom of toeks which will render it tm-
possibile (o release or operate & preks until several different oficials are in attendanceé, each with a key thal plays a- part (o unlocking the press The dies or piates used in printing the eards and which are furnishied by the poitofice department. are ke Wine carefully gusrded. When guch & plate s ghen to a printer for use in makiing bnpressions he muost glve A receipt for it to the afficial in charge Q-% the vault where these precivus plates are stored and the ‘printer c@rnot leave the bullding at
‘ © ' thus tad will be kept on the cards until they depart in sealed packages for the various postoffices throughout the country, where they will be issued to the public As delivered by the machines the postal cards are mechanically . counted and automatically assembled in packs of 25— each pack belog secured by a band of white paper. These packs are placed in pasteboard boxes, each of which will accommodate 20 packs or 500 carda The pasteboard boxes, ir turn, are packed in wooden cases, varving in sive and ranging in 'm;.mc-:!_r from §.OOO 1o 100,000 cards It 1s in this form that they are shipped upon requisition to the postmasters throughout the land. In order that all orders for postal cards may be filled promptly the government printing office, once the new activity Is under way. will constant!y keep on hand in Its fireproof. burglar-proof vaults a surplus stock of about 30,000 000 postal cards The precautions that will surround the manufacture and dispatch of postal cards at the government printery will extend to the destruction of the misprinted or otherwise spoiled cards. Officials of the postoffice department will be on duty at the printery at all times to supervise the manufactyre of the cards and more especially to inspect the raw material used and to see to it that it at all times and in all respects meets the reguirements of the government. Trade Organization of Printers ~ Some interesting information in regard to trade or ganization among printers appears in the Typographical Journal, the official publication of the International Typographical union. It is in the form of a review of a book by George E. Barnett, associate professor of political economy in the Johns Hopkins university. The book, which is just from the press, {s entitled, “The Printers: a Study in American Trade Unionism.” Mr. Barnett was in Indianapolis for a considerable length of time, several years ago, gathering information at the headquarters of the International Typographical union to be used in his book. “A perusal of Dr. Barnett's book,” says the review,
Ithe appearance of a quarry. i It was time for extreme measures, and that the situation was saved at all was due to the vigor and the busignvess acumen of the late dean. As it 1 was the abby had to pay a fearful { price. A loan of £25,000 was made to i.the dean and chapter by the ecclesfastical commissioners. This enabled the authorities to get level with the worst of these structural defects. On the other hand, they were compelled to suspend the sixth canonry, the income derived from which has been
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s no doubt bt that the Instits. tton can keep the L rountry supplied with pasial cards noe matter to what ~proportions the enrrespondence of the American people may grow o Just sx . Lnele Sam guards very carefully the man. facture of poxtage stamaps and paper monéy, so will he take every pre cantion agningt
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the conciusion of the dav's work until he has returned to this depository the printing plates which have been in his custody. Finally the postal cards will be counted repeatediy during the process of manufacture - perhaps a score of times in all—and
employed for many years past in gradually paying off this immense loan. Charity Covereth a Multitude of Sins. He was charitably inclined and every night for more than a week he pitied the old man whom he met standing in the doorway of a downtown office building. The first night it was very cold, so he asked the old man if he wouldn’t like a drink to warm him up. They had their drinks and the charitably inclined person gave the old man 50 cents to buy &
“discioses the fart that mass meetings of printers for the purpose of congidering trade guestlons were held in New York an eariy as 1776 snd In Philadeiphia in 1756 Continueus organizations were formed tn New York Philadelphin, Baltimore and Hoston befiore the elnse of the sighteanth century or shortly thereafter and e Ty pographical Boclety of New York was in existence from 1755 10 1987 llp 1799 the Frankiin Typoeraphionl society wan organieed o the same clty. In 1808 the New Yark Trpographical soclety was organized and Is sflll in exist ence. The Philadeliphin Typographical society was crgan fzed in 1502 and ix also st active A However, Dr- Barnett asserts that there I some evt dence that there Bad been a pristers’ society in the Quaker city previous to this known as the "Asyium Com. pany.’ The date of the first Raltimore organization s equally ;mi*gfljtn,_hm, probabiy ax eariy as 1842 Thera was alse a soctety In sxlitence in Boston in fhat year The author says that no societies appest fo bave been formed outgidé of the four cities named before 1810, in which year the Philade!phia society received a communt cation ‘from the New Orieans Typographical society, in
closing & copy of their corstitution” In ISIS socicties were organtized at Wasbingion and Albany As Tar as the (nformation of Dir. Barnett extendg these societies were formed primarily to ‘raise and establish prices’” © The article then refers to various jocal arganizations that were formed in 1830 and directiy following that date and continves by saying that about 1848 the organt satinn of pew unions hegan la RO 00 Wmors rapidiy. and sipee 1850 have been in existence in practically all the iarger American cities o “The first suggestion that the local associations should form an organtzation was made in 1834 and two years jater delegates from aggociations at Halilmore, New York, Harrisburg Philadeiphia, Washingion and New Orleans assembied in Washington and framed a constity tiot for the Natlonal Typographical society, The first session was held in New York in 1887, when the name was changed to the Natlonal Typographical association *in 1850 a call was tssued for a convention which was to be held in New York. at which time delegales assembhled from Albany. New York, Philadeiphia, Baltimore, Trenton and Loulsville, The second convention was held in Baltimore fn 1851, and the third in Cincinnatl in 1852, which resolved {tself into ‘the first sesslon of the National Typographical union v “Old Pete’’ Is Dead Peter Morton, or “oOld Pete” a colored man and a quaint character of antebellum days, died at his home in Geneva court recently, the Clocinnati Enqguirer says. He did pot know his exact age, which was about 89 years. and there is probably no one living who does. “oOld Pete” since the close of the civil war, has at different times been a family servant and man of all work in many prominent families on the hilis, and in Avondale and varied his employment occasionally by doing porter work in downtown stores. It is related of him, and the story was confirmed by himself, that before the civil war he was the property of a Kentucky gambler, who went broke, and “Pete,” with all other chattels possessed by the gambler, had to be sold to satisfy his creditors. . : : L The officers of a bank in Maysville, Ky.. who had taken a liking to the colored man on account of his genjal good nature and strict honesty, offered to buy bhis freedom for him {f he would execute his personal note in their favor and make his payments upon it, according as he was able, until they were repaid. This he agreed to do, but with the close of the civil war and the ‘scattering of his friends far and wide, Pete fell irto hard lines from the lack of a permanent home and steady employnient, but he never forgot his financial obligations to his banker benefactors and he continued making his payments to them for 20 years after the close of the war, until the debt was finally paid. :
pight's lodging. The old man thanked him heartily. Last week the charitable chap gave the old man an overcoat and told him if he needed help to come around to his Wall street office. Finally the benefactor asked the old man who he was. Why didn't he get a job? “Oh, I'm the night watchman in this building,” was the reply. “I stand outside to get the fresh air.” : - Now when the charitable person meets the old man he ignores him. - New York Bur
The Beginning of the Galil i t " ' ean Ministry Susday Schowl Lesson foe Joa 16, 1910 wencaly Arensged o Thos Page : : . fr % N i » . v e FLALE L . T Capas ” & ¥y & A 8 . ¥ 8 oSI rYy * » of 8 vw : 5”»;;?2‘? ofs ahgd Practical Thought, & tocimt B choao» siin ¢ % g P i kos b, g oA ot e gt it i ) i Rig fiowner o i ’ * oy 7 TR ¥ 3 % “his i - i . s 3 ¥ omn V,‘rn,, s - % 2 o kg - ¥ b. - . The wevd “ Fad 3 % A 00l e Nay e | st X fonlies fhe oy " Best s (7 ¥ 4 { v § 4 \,T"'-‘vb"’xv . ‘ [ The Prophetic \ Dawn af Yo N :,_‘...v 3 ; ' Yagial (et ¢ g i ty ey hivgee by ", % ~", ! . 324 o 4 toi vt f‘».."h w" f de by 1 v T G Tewsns o the K% ere The Calling of (b } Y Ve IS 32 fegus now maede anither advaned mets (o enlarge his prysent work sod to prepare for it inushee gnd the extension of Yim pospel after - his death It was “a school f instru tion in his {deal! of rightecusnuss™ Simon, who Iz “ralled Peter,” the Rock, so named by Jesus on his firse arquaintance {John 1 42 as a proph ecy and ideat a call upward (o falfi] the possibilittes within him. “And Andrew his Brother,” who had shawn hizs posgibiiities as a fisher of men by bringiag his brather to Jesus “Cast ing a net into the sea” Matthew iy ey a condensed account of the story told in full by Luke Jesus used one of their boats as a pulpit to preach to the pecple on the shore He showed the fishermen that the boat was of value, although they had fished from 1t all night in vain. Then at his command they 18t down their nets and enclosed a great phmber of fishes. 1t was with great wisdom that at this point when they were marveling at their success, Jesus (19 “saith unto them, Follow me and 1 wiil make you fishers of men.” - Their partners, James and John. Who had been summoned to aid Poter, were not far away i 21. “Going on from thence, he gsaw™ theas “other two brethren™ in their boat “with Zebedee their father, mending their nets” which had been torn by the great catceh of fish. “And he called them.” All four left their nets . and followed Jesus, and became fishers of men. o =8 IV. Going About Doing Good to the Bodles and Souls of Men—Vs. 23.25. These verses are a summary of which chapters 59 g've a detailed account gshowing his “varied, extensive, and far-famed work.” 23. "And Jesus went about all Galilee.” This was his first tour of the country. Jesus scattered the good seed everywhere, knowing that soime of it would fall into the good soil of honest hearts and spring up and bear fruit, : Teaching. Instructing. interpreting the Scriptures, guiding the understanding showing the truths of God. Preaching. Proclaiming the gospel, the good news from God, concerning the kingdom, the Messiah's kingdom, the kingdom of heaven. | 24. "“And his fame” the “report” of what Jesus was doing. The result was that from all the region, including Syria, the country to the north of Galilee, “they brought tnmto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases,” such as fevers, leprosy, blindness, lameness, dropsy, and torments, diseases attended with excruciating
The man from Jowa begin to talk 2 ¢ Ihe Trßin was we oul of 12 % by " i 0t g ) f p ibo . k etk i " - Tha T % net (e ¥ £ LT iz ; (4 ¢ TR ail 5 . : ; s o i ie e 75 % ae4m ¥ wn b @ . : a g 1 : CGOE this :5g3; % X #t ! 5 oxg A ! { i L 8 -4 = =l we \ 3id Ihe ! ¥ & ' 3 ¥ , TS i ‘ iR i i § it rid p . ¥ od 2. : N t . g 56 . a ¥ : E ko ihead 1t : m L g ' psen ; #h ', . . ) e > i } : Gl @ ] ] i .’ : 5 11» x . X : g * : i.a g 8 Nigher i s 1} 5 ! in . s ) " . B (.80, 1 1D COCINMA . UNPROFESSIOC ;HL.
' ' ‘sii“s:— ~ i / s - ¢ / - G ‘_ b : : k ; + R - gy - ¢ 3! ‘ 5 fi‘#g; i \ I ¥ N . 4!‘ ' ’ AL R - ¢ 1 t 5 of the exper 443 i rigtor-—Na, perfectls 3. ok cail it Suppesing 1 ate the same Ineuis ag my cllents Where Are Harry and isabelia Alien? Harry is now aged 20 years, and his gisier, - lapheila, aged 13 venrs ihe children were taken In ¢éharge by the Nebruska Chiidren’'s Home society in 1887 fiom Grand Island, following the death of the father, Silas Allen The cmather i now in Oklahoma, and s distfracted . boecause ghe cannot locate her ehididren, whom she has not seen gifice they were taken hy superintendent of the soclety twelve years ago, who now refuses to tell their mother where they are. If the chiidren will address P. O, Hox £9%, Omaha, Nebr, giving thelr own address, it. will -be sent (o their mother, ‘ Coals of Fire. ' One Christmas evening a Sunday " gchool puptl appeared at church, only to be surggunded -lmmediately by a sumber of deriding playmates. 'She’s. wearing her sister's coat!” cried one ) “And she's got her brother's gloves on'"” erisd snouther, “Yes,” was the retort that turned the tide of ridicule, “and 1 came with my mother's blessing."--Judge. ) New Tonic Mixture. { ~At this season many people espe cially old folks need a tonic appetizer which will also relieve kidney and . bladder troubles and strengthen the blood and tissues. A well known phy- . sician claims there is nothing superiar . as a winter tonie to the following taken . -three to sic times daily in tablespoonful doses. To a haif-pint of good | whiskey add one ounce.compound fluid | balmwort and one ounce compound | syrup sarsaparilla. : § . ; Reason Enough. “His feelings are greatly hurt since he lost his job.” | “No wonder he's hurt. He fell from ga2 high position.” : = __ ONLY ONE “BROMO gcmx!fi' T SAXATIS SEONO QPUINE, Lok to ouver to Cure a Cold in One Day. %c. (A man can’t help feeling restless when even his bills are unsettied. Aot aligonst Frcat mre win e R Tle L | iR ety AT ieeleklt mp 1€ ~ The best of pians fall out, and the best of friends get married. : Smokers also like Lewis’ Single Bindee igar for its purity. It is never doped,— ;f‘l;tobm in its natural state. 7 Following cheap advice ils apt o prove expensive.
