Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 163, 19 April 1910 — Page 8

hie mcmiOND palladiuii and sun-TEiiEanAn, Tuesday, april io, 1010.

r. AQE EIGHT

::::iE to quit as

iill us Veteran Maine Senator to Retire at the End of His Present Term. FIGHTING HIM AT HOME RHODE ISLAND SENATOR CONFIRMS THE REPORT THAT HE WILL GIVE UP HIS SEAT IN THE UPPER HOUSE. Washington, April 19. Senator Eugene Hale of Maine, the man who, next to Senator Aldrich. has wielded the greatest power In the control of the United State senate during recent years, is to retire at the end of bis present term, next March. This thirty years of continuous sers vice In the senate will be terminated by his voluntary retirement frpm the fight for reelection, in which the pre liminary work already had. been, well started In Maine. - The announcement of Hale's retirement is coincident to the confirma tion by Senator Aldrich that he will emit at the end of his present term. Senator Hale's withdrawal from the senatorial fight creates surprise great er even than that which attended the .first rumors of the retirement of Al drich. v Fight on Hale Grows. Until recently, it had been believed here that Hale's control in Maine was unshaken. The fight that has develop ed against him In the last few months has grown to such proportions that in fluential republicans have predicted his defeat in coming elections, and his own friends have been greatly con cerned at the magnitude of the con test for reelection. v The necessity for a bitter fight to regain his seat has discouraged the veteran senator, and the strain of the contest has taxed his strength. His family has strongly urged his withdrawal, and this fact has had much to do with his determination to retire. Senator Hale will be 74 years old in June. In the special tariff session of congress last summer he stood as the leading high tariff advocate from New England and the progress of the session told greatly upon his physical endurance. Aioricn lens Retirement nan. , Senator Aldrich announced last night that he will not be a candidate for reelection to the senate, and that he will retire at the expiration of his present term on March 3, 1911. "I have decided not to be a candi date again," said the senator. "Since something of my plans has become known; I make the statement I had not Intended to for a few days yet" Mr. Aldrich said 111 health alone lls kl -.let Aitlnlnn A waaIt aim he went to New York, where he con sulted physicians. They were insis tent that he rid himself of the more exacting of his burdens and devote a large share of his time to out of door exercise. - The Truss ef God. The "truce of God" was introduced by the clergy of Gulenne around about the year 1030. It was adopted in Spain about 1050, in England about 1080. According to this famous treaty, a cessation of all violent quarrels was enjoined under heavy penalties during all church festivals and from every Wednesday evening until the follow ing Monday morning. This left only about eighty days In the year avail able for shooting and stabbing one's neighbors. The truce seems to have accomplished much good, notwith standing the fact that it was very im perfectly observed. New York American. Hopeless. . Lawyer You don't like the Jury? Defendant I do not. No. l is my tailor. No, 8 Is my grocer. No. 5 Is my milk and egg dealer and No. 7 is my wife's first husband ! What chance have got y St. Paul Dispatch. , - - Si,.,'. .J : A SternChase. The Youth Yes, I'm la business for myself, but I don't seem to be able to meet with any success. The SageNobody ever meets with business, young man. He must over take lt-PhUsdelphia Press. An Exception. Dibbs Women are invading all kinds of masculine occupations. Gibbs ' There are no women rat catchers yet! Boston Transcript, v Genius finds its own road and car ries It own lamp. Wilimott U. AC.TGD A ni:r ei Flrtt-CIis Ifca in the following trades: General allaround machinists, engine, dropforg. die-sinkers, tool, bench, floor, lathe, boring mill, planer, milling machine- and automatic screw macMn hands, blacksmiths, millwrights, engineers, electricians, brass finishers, Fox. speed and monitor lath hands, polishers, buffers, platers, wood and metal patternmakers, ' draughtsmen, brass molders. Iron raolders, coreinakers, light and heavy sheet Iron workers, slate and cornice men. structural Ironworkers, bollermakers, tinsmiths, wood and metal lathers, plasterers, bricklayers, -stonecutters, plumbers and steam-fitters, experienced automobile men (all branches), shlpfttters, riveters and other shipyard help, paperhansera, K Inters, decorators, carpenters, rdwood finishers, single and double truck drivers, book and Job eovrpeeitors. photo engravers., uno end copper etchers, half-tone pertArs, finishers, experienced stock t -vl timekeepers: also a number of a-ron. willing young men desirous of lwarntnr trades. Reasonably teddy wore Good wages. Apply wits reference, to v - :tt, era

MJICII

HAS LARK FAMILY

And Woman Centenarian Has Used Tobacco Since She Was a Child. . HAS 23 LIVING CHILDREN Moundsville, W. Va., April 19.-Mrs. Sarah 'Brandon, 100 years old, of this city, holds the record for .having produced the largest number of soldiers for the civil war. No less than sixteen of her boys served in the battles of that war, fourteen on the Union and two on the Confederate side, while her total family was twenty-three children with but one of them a girl. In this section Mrs. Brandon holds the distinction of being the oldest living wo man. In honor of her other features the government has placed her picture In the National Gallery at Washing ton, and her likeness Is also In the gal lery at Columbus, Ohio. She was before her marriage to Charles Brandon, Miss Sarah Parker, born in Belmont county, Ohio, on April 15, 1801. Her father was a farmer, named Philip Parker, while her mother is said to have been a full blooded Indian. At the age of elev en years, almost one hundred years ago, she lost her right eye, when her small brother accidentally shot it out with an arrow from a crosBbow. She has been a constant user of tobacco since her girlhood, and smokes and chews nothing but the strongest varie ties. Still hearty and strong, Mrs. Brandon does all her own houseworl goes to the center of her city each week for her groceries, carrying a large basketful home, and in other activities shows wonderful powers for her age. Her twenty-three children are all the parents of large families, and, al though her memory has failed so she does not know where all live, her eld est and youngest sons live in this vi cinity. The former, Hiram Brandon, is eighty-nine years of age and has a famljy of nine children, while the lat ter, Evan Brandon, Is seventy-two and works daily in a coal mine. He also is the father of nine, and shows the scars of no less than seventeen bullet holes received during the war. DYNAMITE AND ICE. A Strenuous Day In the Arctic With Pesry on the Roosevelt. I think that none of the members of the Peary expedition will ever forget the 30th of August. The Roosevelt was kicked about the floes as If she had been a football. The game began about 4 o'clock In the morning. I was In my cabin trying to get a little sleep with my clothes on, for I had not dared to remove them for a week. My rest was cut short by a shock so vio lent that before I realized that anything had happened I found myself on deck a deck that Inclined to starboard some 12 to 15 degrees. I ran, or, rather, climbed, the deck to the port side and saw what had happened. A big floe rushing past with the current had picked up the grounded berg to which we were attached by the hawsers and dashed it against the Roosevelt and clear along her port side as if that thousand ton berg had been a toy. The berg brought up against another one just aft of us, and the Roosevelt slipped from between the two like a greased pig. ' As soon as the pressure was relaxed and the ship regained an even keel we discovered that the cable which had been attached to the floe berg at the stern had become entangled with the propeller. It was a time for lightning thought and action, but by attaching a heavier cable to the parted one and taking a hitch around the steam capstan we finally disentangled It. This excitement was no sooner over than a great berg that was passing near us spilt in two of Its own accord, a cube of some twenty-five or thirty feet just missing our quarter by only a foot or two. "Bergs to the right of them, bergs to the left of them, bergs on top of them," I heard somebody say as we caught our breath at this miracnlous escape. The ship was now quite at the mercy of the drifting ice. and with the pressure from the outer pack the Roosevelt again careened to starboard. I knew that if she were driven -any higher on to the shore we would have to discharge a large part of the coal In order to lighten her suf ficiently to get her off again, so I de cided to dynamite the Ice. I told Bartlett to get out his batter les and dynamite and to smash the Ice between the Roosevelt and the heavy floes outside, making a soft cushion for the ship to rest on. The batteries were brought up from the lazaret, one of the dynamite boxes lift ed out with caution, and Bartlett and I looked for the best places In the Ice for the charges. Several . sticks of dynamite were wrapped In pieces of old bagging and fastened on the end of long spruce poles, which we had brought along specially for this pur pose. A wire from the battery had, of course, been connected with one of the primers buried, in the dynamite. Tole, wire and dynamite were thrust down through a crack in the Ice at several places In the adjacent floe. The other end of each wire was then connected with the battery, every one got away to a respectful distance on the far side of the deck, and a quick. sharp push on the plunger of the bat tery sent the electric current along the wires. Rip! Bang! Boom! The shin shook like a dish of jelly, and a column of water and pieces of ice went flying a hundred feet Into the air, geyser fash ion. The pressure of the Ice against tne snip being thus removed, she right ed herself and lay quietly on her cushion of crushed Ice, waiting for what ever might happen next. Commander B. EL Peary in Hampton's Magazine. Though New York theater managers give weir customers plenty of foreign plays, they give two from home anthors, where they give one that is Im

ported.

SMOKE IIUISAIICE

WILL BE And It Is Probable That a Reg ulating Ordinance Will Be Offered. ROUTINE COUNCIL WORK DURING THE SHORT SESSION LAST - EVENING 8EVERAL. OF THE COUNCILMEN CALLED ATTENTION TO DEFECTS. City Attorney A. M. Gardner was instructed by council last evening to Investigate the smoke nuisance and determine as to the advisability and legality of drawing up a smoke ordin ance. He will make a report at the next meeting of council. The matter was introduced by Councilman Weishaup who stated that the residents in the vicinity of the Richmond Bak-i ing company were loud in their complaints against the smoke from that building. Mr. Weishaup stated that It was necessary for many of the residents to keep their windows closed to prevent the, soot from collecting In their homes. The same condition of affairs is thought to exist in other portions of the city also. The bad condition of the alley in the rear of 315 and - 317 North Nineteenth street was referred to the board of works. It is said that there is a large hole in the alley at that point and it is feared tha unless the city makes the repair, a damage suit will be the result. Water Runs Into Yards. The alley between Southwest Third and Fourth street, south of National avenue, is also the occasion of complaint. The sewer fill is high, causing the water to run back into the yards. The city engineer will make an investigation of the matter. Councilman King stated that the property owners on North ' Seventeenth street were complaining be cause of the fact that the street lit many places was higher and lower than- the sidewalk and gutter. He asked that the matter be presented to the board of works. Mayor Zim merman stated that he knew of the condition of the street and that there were many more such streets In the city. However, he said, there was no money in the city treasury and so far as remedying the defects was con cerned, the city officials were practically the same as helpless. Councilman Evans called the atten tion of council to -the bad condition of the sidewalks, on both sides of North Fifth street from Main to D streets and made the recommendation that the improvement be made. The property owners along that street have been endeavoring for some time to have the sidewalks improved. The matter was referred to the board. IIEGRO PUG KILLED (American News Service) Philadelphia, April 19. Frank Cole, the negro light weight pugilist, died today from injuries received in a fight with Stanley Rodgers last night, Cole's skull was fractured when he struck the floor with a terrific force after receiving the solar plexus blow. Rodgers was arrested. L0WDEI1 TO RETIRE (American News Service) Rockford, I1L, April 19. Congress man Frank O. Lowden, of the thir teenth district today sent out an offi cial letter announcing his intention to retire from congress at the expiration of his present term. Ill health is said to be the cause of his retirement. A CONTRARY WOMAN. Things That : Cured Her Sometimes Killed Other People. "Apnendizitiz does nod hurdt me lige It might odder beoples," said her Bavarian neighbor when the woman had complimented her upon her appearance after the attack. "Nodding effer hurdts me the same as odder beoples nodding. Things dat gure me kills odder beoples lomedimes. Did I neffer dell you aboud de dime ven X vas a ghild, ven I had sgarled veffer? No? Den I vill dell you. "In -our down aboud dat dime dere vere six hundud ghlldrun vst diet off sgarled veffer six hundud. All our family vas down mit him. Dwo off my b rudders diet Dey bad giffen me oub. De docdor he say: 'Led her haf enny ting she rants. Id wond make no difference. Led her haf her lasdt vish, vaddeffer he is.' "And so Id happuned dat I vanted some sour meelk. Und dey gift me all I vanted. A big bod die it vas off sour meelk. und I set oup und drink him "Den I lay back und vent do sleep. und ven de docdor he gome again he xay, very suppdsed. 'Vy. her veffer he seem to be all goner "Und he vas all gone. In dwo days I vas oup und aboud de house as veil as effer. " Vonderfuir says de docdor. Vonderfuir "Den de beoples in de nexdt house vst had a very sick ghild dey thought dey vould dry se same flag. "Dey gift! her a big boddle off sour meelk do drinkt, and in aboud half a hour by de glock she vas deat" New York Press, - The oldest church. building now standing in New York is St Paul's chapel, the corner stone of wfclcb was

PROBED

laid in 17M.

SHE SPURI1S A DUKE

And Miss Townsend Will Mar ry an American, Peter Goelet Gerry. WHAT HER MOTHER WANTED Washington, April 19. Mias Mathilde Townsend, the statuesque blonde beauty who has refused many titled Buitors and many more without titles, Is now really going to marry . Peter Goelet Gerry, of New York. Mrs. Townsend wanted her daughter to marry the Duke de Alba of Spain, but Miss Mathilde has a mind of her own and resolutely refused to consider the Duke's suit.. Suitors came and went, with no more manifest luck than the Spanish Duke. Last January young Gerry came to Washington to - attend several social functions and met Miss Townsend. They liked each other and pretty soon tber gossips' tongues were on the wag. Early last week Mrs. Townsend and her daughter went to New York. The elder Gerrys arranged a dinner party at which the formal announcement of the engagement was to be 'made, but Mrs. Townsend refused to attend, and so there was no formal announcement. Mrs. Townsend might well be for given for having such aspirations for her daughter, for, in spite of the fact that more than 100 pretty girls have been formally presented to society since Miss Townsend made her debut, there has not been one who. could vie with her in point of beauty and charm. She is a splendid horsewoman. Mr. Gerry is the younger son of Eldridge T. (Jerry, one of the wealthiest men in the state. He was graduated from Harvard in 4901, and has been admitted to the bar both in Rhode Island and in New York. His brother, Robert L. Gerry, married Miss Cor nelia Harriman, daughter of the late E. H. Harriman. The wedding will take place in June. ASK WALSH PAHDOil Twenty-five Thousand Indianians Want the Former Banker Released. TAFT HANDED PETITION (Palladium Special) Washington, April 19. Representatives Cullom and Frank Moss, called on the president today and presented a petition signed by twenty-five thousand persons in southwestern Indiana, asking for a pardon of John R. Walsh of Chicago, the convicted ex-banker. The Indiana representatives told the president that the petitioners lived along the lines of Southern Indiana railroad or in the vicinity of other enterprises in Indiana, . conducted by Walsh. Cuilop and Moss added their own personal influence to the Intercession on behalf of the imprisoned banker. The president made no comment, but referred the petitions ; to the department of justice. . Attorney-General Wickersham will make a report on the case to the president at an early date. BRUIN'S FREE SUPPER. Experience ef a Camping Party In Yellowstene Park.'. Jn the Yellowstone park all wild animals are allowed to roam as they will, and it is against the law to shoot them. Some of these animals have become very tame and do not look on man as an enemy. In fact, the bears seem to think the hotels built there are for their convenience, as they visit the garbage cans nightly for their meals. Even tiny chipmunks will stand and Anlif nuinl. a a lhav turn l,v An tha road, and such little thieves as they are! They live in style on grain they steal from the hotel stables. One night a party camped near one of the pretty ravines, and, being tired from a day's tramp, they had early gone into their tents to sleep all except the boy, who enjoyed slumbering in a sleeping bag with the stars for a roof. Early In the night they were aroused by a noise of falling pans In the kitchen wagon. Those who were not afraid rushed out and discovered a big black bear cal mly eating ' his supper from the provisions. Not being allowed to shoot him. one grabbed a whip, another a broom, and they flourished these weapons about. Frightened and grunting, bruin clumsily scrambled away, when suddenly there was a livelier granting from the bear, accompanied by an unearthly yelL Mr. Bruin in his hurried flight had stepped on the unnoticed outdoor sleeper, frightening him so much that afterward he slept under, the tent roof. Detroit Free Press. A French newspaper, publishes some statistics showing the causes of death in the medical profession. The fig ures are impressive, but there is no indication as to the source of the in formation. We read that 44 per cent die of heart disease, 20 per cent from nervous affections, 20 per cent from the morphia habit and 7 per cent from tuberculosis. The prevalence of mor phia is ascribed to the fact that doctor knows when his malady is Incurable and morphia , is . sought to soothe the mind. London Globe. TX r , . TT as l our Mou In lsftsiiriitt.fct Z3c esessnicArfSsj fjTTZ ts-lc.

PEAT A UU10UE ODE A Two-story Brick House Was' Moved a Distance of 250 Feet DID NOT CRACK PLASTER

Kansas City, Kan., April 19. Moving a two story brick house with a founds tion dimension of thirty-five to forty I f Mt. S ftlRtflnr of tvn hnnitml ,fiH fifty feet, without damaging so much as the plaster on the wall is the exceptional task just finished on Inde pendence Boulevard. When it was decided to enlarge the Independence Avenue Christian church the lot next to it, upon which stood the brick house, was needed. R. A Long purchased the lot and house and later sold the house to Matt O'Connell, an architect, with the condition that it be moved at once to another location. A site was selected two hundred and fifty feet west and the moving con tractor signed an agreement to stand all damages to the house while it was being moved. With the neighborhood divided into "It can be done," and "It can't be done," factions, the contractor started in to place the big girders beneath the brick dwelling. R. A. Long used ' his influence to have street car switches built at both ends of the 250 feet bou levard, which would be in use during the moving, and for four days the cars have turned back at each side of this stretch, passengers walking from one car to the other. v. The big brick parcel was delivered at the new address in first class order with not a scratch in the plastering or a crack in the wals. The barn, twenty-six by forty, - was taken over ths same trail at the rate of one hundred and fifty feet in an hour and a half. The "It can be done" faction is chant ing the "I told you so" chorus. The lot where the house originally stood and the one to which it was tak en were four feet above the street level First enough of the foundation was removed so : that several large girders could be passed - beneath ' the floor, Jacks were used to raise the house above the foundation far enough to allow several mammoth girders to be passed under the first set, resting directly on the old foundation. A receiving platform was cribbed In the street to a level with the house. Iron rollers placed along the girders and the power to draw the house onto the platform applied from a capstan. With the house on the platform, jacks were again brought into use beneath the girders, the cribbing removed, and the house lowered to the street. By the same power and Iron rollers the house was moved down the street, where It was again jacked up to the level of its new foundation, cribbed and rolled into place. CATCH TWO OMBIIS One of the Men Confesses to Murder of an Indianapolis Policeman. WOUND, ANOTHER OFFICER - (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, April 19. Following the fatal shooting of Patrolman Joseph Krupp and wounding of Patrolman Alfred Groves, in a pistol , battle early this morning, Walter Whitelock and George Duglas, each aged twenty years and claiming Pittsburg as 'their home, were arrested at Avon, InL, at eight o'clock this morning, when they were discovered sleeping , in an abandoned construction . camp shanty. Later Whitelock confessed to having fired the shots that caused Krupp's death. The revolver battle occurred when the newly appointed . policemen attempted to arrest Whitelock and Duglas as suspicious characters when they were dis covered In the railroad yards at two o'clock this morning. The men had come from Cincinnati and were enroute to Gary, Indiana, ostensibly to secure employment GAS KILLS I VJOMEII (American News Service) " Chicago, April 19. Mrs. Nellie MoNamara, wife of Fire Captain Dan McXamara and her two daughters Ma bel and Helen, fourteen and twelve years, were discovered asphyxiated by illuminating gas at their home in Ad-. ams avenue today. The deaths are believed to be accidental. McXamara was on duty. Truth. Truth must be ground for every man by himself out of Its husk, with such help as he can get Indeed, but not without stern labor of his own. rs doctor new canine fraeraessnl Tzzrz?. xs wSt pnCZT aasver, "Very, very he Ere-1

wmfl ncsr.H Aveva fares ws is a

entirety free frasa itZl.

Milady's Mirror What would you do to keep well and look well? Cultivate a belief In wa ter. It is hard to get too much of it either externally or iuternally. - Every woman who values her digestion sud her complexion should drink at least six glasses of cold water a day. If desired, the glass taken before retiring and first thing In the morning may be hot, with a pinch of salt in it Have appointed hours for this water drinking and take it at those times. In the morning, just before you leave the bed and the last thing before en-. tering it at night, a half hour before each meal and In the middle of the morning and afternoon will divide the periods nicely. At first It may seem a great nuisance to drink water by rule, but soon it will become a habit that you will get almost unconsciously without disturbing your routine for more than a minute. If you have trained maids they should be Instructed to bring the water at the appointed hours. , Equally important to the water drinking habit is that of taking a cold shower or dashing oneself with cold water after the daily hot bath. This not only prevents taking cold, but acts as a tonic to the skin, stirs up the circulation and .adds color to Hps and cheeks and brightness to the eyes. This, too, is hard at first, but the system soon gets accustomed to the shock and is benefited by It. Whits Hair Distinguishing. White hair Is becoming more and more fashionable. Women no longer look upon white locks . as the sign manual of advancing age. Probably our great-great-grandmothers, who spent hours in the powdering closet without counting the time thrown away, were perfectly well aware that white hair takes as much as five or ten years off the apparent age of its possessor. One of the things that nobody Is prepared to dispute Is the fact that dark ey and eyebrows gain immensely in soft ness and depth under a crown of white hair and that a woman with a good complexion and well marked brows never looks so distinguished as when time has succeeded In bleaching her hair to an unmistakably snowy tint. Think Pleasant Thoughts. When you are dropping off to sleep try to think of something pleasant and don't screw up your eyes and draw down the corners of your mouth, for both these habits help to bring wrin kles. ' Pleasant thoughts bring a pleasant expression to the face, which as the years go on become permanent. The people you meet who have pleasant expressions are the ones who have never allowed hard or unkind or discontented thoughts to find a rest lng place in their minds. A Good Soap. The girl who finds it hard to get soaps that agree with her skin can make herself a cleansing and whitening soap cream from a cake of pure soap, a tablespoouful of benzoin and a quart of boiling water. Cut the soap Into thin shavings and put theiQ in a saucepan with. the wa

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11 HIS

WEEK

your haberdasher b c?:r,rf nyibg the Mid-Scascn Shovrins ef

SHIRTS Look in the windows as you 150 Every Claett shirt tCt-JSTTlahel

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-. can.

rer, coc-mg nnur tee coasaswswy exthick cream. It should stsansir slowly on the back of the stove, not boiL When nemrly cold add the bssnwta drop by drop. ctrrlx aU tie time.

seep the mixture la a wHa glass with a Hi " ' 1 When Drying ths Hair. The condition of the hair for eoany days after a shampoo depends on the) fashion in which It has, bean tried. Undoubtedly the fact that girts permS their locks to hang straight, clinging to the head, after washing, accounts for many Instances of straight tresses. " for it is wonderful what effects may. be gained by a little management when drying the locks. For example the hair may be divided across tha top. as it Is In making ready for a pompadour roll. The upper portion should be lifted, as though a roll were' to be put beneath, and a slight twist made In the long hair, which ts then - pinned on top of the bead. This entirely prevents that downward ewee of the locks that is so unbecoming. The pinning Is done while the hair to damp, but not wet, , To allow the tresses, to dry with at decided part anywhere on top, where It will show later. Is a great mistake, because unless the hair Is unusually fluffy It will certainly divide of Its v v a sv . vs a was vsss wv,mm 'vsan-sji will prevent the part showing. When the hair grows in such manner as to part naturally the tendency must be) fought against ' from the first. - The problem of preventing parts may ' bs met in this wsy: The locks for two Inches or more on both sides of the division are to be gathered and smoothly brushed back. Then, a comb . is pushed in to hold the mass securety and prevent the hair from spreading. Before putting en a hat It is well to draw the hair over that division. which otherwise will have opportunity to make itself more evident from ther pressure caused by the bat -, , A SIMPLE CERODT (American News Service) Milwaukee. April 19. Simplicity; marked all details of the program , which has been prepared for the in augural ceremony today of Emll Seidel, socialist mayor-elect and his col leagues who have been elected for two years to conduct the affairs of tfclsj city. Victor L. Berger, alderman-at-large elect has outlined the policy of the administration will endeavor to follow the coming two years. Everybody In the dty is expecting Mayor-elect Ce del to make some-atatement of iav portance after the ceremony. The socialists are endeavoring to have It understood thoroughly that it will not be the policy of the present officers to introduce any Utopian) Ideas into the affairs of . the dty bui though at the end of two years it may appear to have been an Utopian ad ministration because of the fair deal ings of the officials. . 1 smut is no,: Holy communion was axlmlnuterea to the membership of St Joseph's)' Benevolent Society yesterday mortj at 7:30 o'clock at Ct Andrew's church The event was in honor of the catroot saint of the society. Saint Joseph. The) Rev. Father i51vian Larben of Cln clnnati, formerly of this city, and m son of Joseph Larben, attended thai service and gave an address on th life work of Saint Joseph fins thstsr y tMMamjam as-y C - "ZXi LCArj CO. AY CeJawlsl Ce )

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