Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 300, 5 September 1910 — Page 4

, PAGE FOUR

THE DICnMOND PAIIiADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1910.

Tt3 mtio.c:.i ?cizim Publlahed and ownad by the PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO, . Iwutd T days ech week, evenlnga and Sunday mornlnc. Office Corner North tth and A atreeia. Hema Phona 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Redelph G. Iada Edits Laftaa Jeeas Beslaeae Manager Carl Bernhardt Amrlili Edlter W. M. Poas4stM Xsws Kdltar SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. Xa Richmond 11.00 per year (In advance) or lOo per weak. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. On a year. In advance 11.0 la month. In advance ......... 2.0 On month. In advance . . .4 RURAL ROUT t: A One year. In advance. ............ $J 00 Bis months. In advance 115 One month. In advance 15 Addreaa ehanaed aa often aa desired; both near and old addresses must be Slvea. ftubscrlbera will please remit with order, which should be riven for specified term i name will not be enterad until payment is received. Kntered at Richmond, Indiana, post office aa aecond cla mail matter. an (New Yarli Ory) basj aad aaitttlti to Ua aJrealatlea 1 at tala ambUaartaa. Oaly Ua ncaree of 4 la its rspan aca j ay tbe RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Haa a population of S3.000 and la growing. It la the county aeat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agricultural community. It Is located due east from Indlanapolia t miles and tnllea from the . atate line. Richmond la a cltv of homea and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It Is also the Jobbing renter of Eastern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond la proud of Ita splendid street, well kept yards. Ita cement sidewalks and beautiful shade treea. It has I national . hanks, Z trust, companies and 4 bulVIng associations with combined resources of over $8,000,000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested 17.000,000. with an annual output of I27.AOO.OOO. and a pay roll of fS.700.ooo. The total pay roll for the city amounts to ' approximately $4,200,000 annually. - There are five railroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. In- ' coming freight handled dally. 1.760.000 slba. : outgoing freight bandied dally. 750.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day. 1.700 csra. Number of paaaenger tralna dallv. St. Number of freight tralna dally. 77. The annual post office receipts amount to fSA.OAO. Total aaaessad valuation of the city, tu.aoo.ooo. Richmond baa two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 13.000. Richmond la the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the state and only eecond In general lobflag Interests. It baa a piano faetry producing a high grade Jtlano every IS minutes. It la the aader In the manufacture of traction englnea, and - produces ' mora threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The clty'a area, la 9.440 acres; baa a court house costing $500.no; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high achool In the middle west under construction: 3 parochial schools; Karlham college and the Indiana Business College; five aplendM fire companies In fine hose bouses; Olen Miller rrk. the , largest and most beautiful r.sr. tn InMlana. the home of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven botela: municipal electric light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric Ilcht plant, inanrlnr competition: the oldest public library In the state, except one and the second largest. 40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed; as miles of 1 Improved afreets; 40 miles of sewers; SS mile of cement curh and gtitter combined : 40 miles of eement walks, and manv miles of brick walks. Thlefr churches. Including the Reld Memorial, hutlt .at a cost of 4180.000; Reld Memorial Hospital, ona of the most modern In the state T. M. C A. btl1dtnv. erected at a cost of 100.000 one of the finest In the state. The amusement center of western Indiana and Western . Ohio. No cltv of the also of Richmond b,o1ds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Pall Festival beld each October Is unique. to ether cltv holds a similar affslr. It Is given In the Interest of the city and financed , by the feuslnesa men. Success awaiting anvone with enterprise In the Panto Proof City. This Is My 62nd Birthday ISHOP BREWSTER. Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewstetr, Protestant Episcopal bishop of Connecticut was born la Windham. Conn. September S. 1848, and received his education at Yale college. He was ordained a deacon of the Protestant Episcopal church In 1871 and a priest the) following year. From 1873 to XSSI ho waa rector of Christ church at Rye. N. J. Subsequently he occupied the pulpits of prominent Episcopal churches in Detroit. Baltimore and Brooklyn. He was chosen bishopcoadjutor of Connecticut in 1897 and succeeded to the bishopric two years later. Bishop Brewster Is widely known not only as an eloquent pulpit orator but as an sb!e writer on religious topics. ' PAST SORROWS. " Feeble natures live in their sorrows instead of converting those sorrows into apothegms of experience. -They are saturated with them, and they consume themselves by sinesat back each day into the afirUa-as of the past. To forget is the peat secret of strong and czz ejiiicace to forget after tha rrfT of nature, which knows no past od begins again every boor the Kysteries of her iadef aiigsUe proJjLiiianias -Balzac .

The Common Cause.

This Is Labor Day. The thought of setting aside a day when the dignity of the man who works is recognized is inspiring. Though mtp have always worked and always will workit is only in these very latter years that we- have come to know it. It Is undeniable, looking back, that we are finding more and more things In common and the more men And in common the better feeling of comradeship there is among them. Today, looking out on things in the big. in the expansive, it is mighty hard to realize that there has been a time when the fellowship of all those who labor in some form or other has been denied and that with not words but blows.

There are many things a-stirring. The big wave of honesty the demand for honesty that has been urging us all on toward changes in our mode of living and doing things, in the way we manage our national government, Is at ita root nothing but the demand of those who work and few do not that they may enJoy the fruits of that work. , This movement called by a name is the insurgent movement a protesta vital but peaceable protest against the forces of dishonest business in all its workings. The man who cannot see the relation between stock watering and his own living cannot be trusted to protect himself against the thing which does him harm. The man who cannot see that a tariff which is not built on a principle of fairness to all is a tax directed against him cannot hope for anything better. The man who cannot see that partisan government has cloaked dishonest men for the spoliation of himself will go on electing men who will despoil him. If men think that these things can go on without doing more-than the Immediate harm to the individual, and will not wreck the state and the nation the state will be wrecked.

And so we are coming, all of us, to see what we have in common and to pay less attention to the things that differentiate us. So, also, we are coming to see that what hurts one body of men one set of individuals hurts another. Railroads cannot go on in the maiming and killing of men without proper restitution to their families without it burdening all of us with paupers and poor citizens to serve the state And it is by no means remarkable that the men who have fought in the state, local and national governments regardless of their party are finding that all these things are drawing them closer together. The records of the Insurgents read clean when it comes to the bettering of labor conditions. And this was not done except from a compelling honesty which saw that If all were not treated fairly the whole state would suffer. In Theodore Roosevelt's Osawatomie speech the word national and nationalist occurred over and over again. That Is a remarkable sign. The seed was sown that men might take into consideration the whole people the bond in common. The' time is shortly coming when the cause of labor and the cause of all the people will be seen Identical. This Is a national movement. e The man who sees In Labor Day merely a day for the recognition i of organised labor is a poor thinker whether he be labor leader or ' capitalist. And the man who says so has a poor opinion of the labor unions and of all the people who work. ' It Is true that many men are outside the unions and yet they have except In certain unavoidable Instances occasioned by the growth of any movement profited. , The man who does not belong to union profits. But this should lead labor organizations to work to the end that all . their dealings shall be above reproach , and all their operations as free from Injustice either to Individuals or business institutions. No force can succeed in doing permanent good by Injustice and no force which does not do good has a right a real right to exist.

When . a few weeks ago John Mitchell arose in the Mine Workers meeting In Indianapolis in which there was the deadliest conflict and confusion and demanded that there be fair play even when the man who is supposed to be his greatest enemy was in the chair and that man was being attacked by Mitchell's own friends there was a thing to command the respect of all men and ' thing to encourage belief in the high hope not only of all organized labor but of all mankind. There was a thing which has done much to strengthen faith in the justice of the unionsThere was a thing to inspire everyone with a feeling of a common cause which can overlook the petty, the temporary and look to the close solidarity of interests without which all will be futile and hopeless chaos.

FORUMOFTHE PEOPLE Articles Contributed Jor This Column Must Not Be in Excess of 400 Words. The Identity of All Contr tutors Must Be Known to the Editor. Articles WiU Be Printed in the Order Received. To Pure Food Crank: Please drop in our factory some morning between 7 and 8 o'clock. We will show you the process of putting labels on our bread. Harry H. Brehm. West Side Bakery, Ike Meyers, Prop. Located. "Your husband spends all his leisure with his automobile," said one woman. "Yes.- replied the other. "Don't you miss him?" "No. If he Isn't at home fixing the machine I can always reach him by telephone at the repair shop." The Permanent Equine. Though airships in the blue may roam And autos speed along. It takes a boss to haul 'em home When anything goes wrong. "THIS DATE

SEPTEMBER 5TH. 1774 First Continental Congress assembled In Carpenter's Hall, Philadelphia. 1795 The United States agreed to pay annual tribute to the Dey of Algiers to secure exemption from pirates. 1810 Organisation of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. 1813 U. S. brig Enterprise captured the British brig Boxer off Seguin, both commanders being killed in the engagement. 1S30 William Francis Allen, American historian, born; died Dec. 9. 1889. 1873 Great Britain paid the indemnity awarded in the Alabama claims. 18$ J. S. Carvell became Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Is- ';" " ' land. : ' ltOS David Torrence. chief Justice of Connecticut, died at Derby. Conn. Born In Scotland. March 3. 1840.

TRUE COURAGE. True courage has so little to do with anger that there always lies the strongest suspicion against it where this passion is highest. True courage is cool and calm. The bravest of men have the least bullying insolence and in the very time of danger are found the most serene, pleasant and free. Rage, we know, can make a coward forget himself and fight But what is done in fury or anger can never be placed to the account of courage. Shaftesbury.

OPTIMISM Optimism is a belief in a great purpose underlying the world for good, absolutely certain to fulfill itself somewhere, somehow. That must have been what Cod saw when he looked upon the world and called it "good." Phillips Brooks. Its Composition. "George, what la this Rockefeller foundation made of?" "Rocks, of coarse." Cleveland Plain Dealer. IN HISTORY"

THE RICII3IOND PALLADIU3I AND

Items Gathered In From Far and Near

The "Sucker List." From the New York Times. it la Interesting to learn from good authority that the lists of names used by promoters of various benevolent schemes to make everybody who does the right thing at the right time wealthy are technically called "sucker lists." If you frequently receive invitations to invest a few trifling dollars in stock which will be worth a hundred times its selling price in a few months you are therefore classed as a "sucker." The wonder is that so many persons who never buy speculative stocks of any kind under any circumstances should have their names on these lists. The inference is that the "sucker lists" are not scientifically made out, that guesswork and mere accident enter largely into their composition. It may be however that the wise persons who manage stock selling syndicates class everybody as a "auker." without prejudice, and that their experience in the long run justifies the classification. Certainly few persons who have permanent adresses escape solicitation. They find themselves on divers and many "mail order lists." and their daily mail is apt to include several Invitations to invest in mines, real estate operations and manufacturing concerns, along with appeals to aid charities and requests from tailors and bootmakers for their custom. It is a well known fact that the compilation of these lists is a branch of modern business reputed to be lucrative. The lists are sold. They must be worth buying or they would not be bought. Yet who does not invariably crumple up this superfluous part of his daily mail and throw It into the waste basket? Loeb's Good Work. From the Omaha Bee. William Loeb is giving his country a very vivid demonstration of actual reform in the system of collecting foreign revenue. In one year he saved to the government the sum of $12,000,000 and better than all, he has seemingly actually destroyed a system of graft and gain, which amounted to robbery or the nation in an amazingly brief period, though it had been intrenched for years. And after all, it was simple work, requiring only common honesty, courage and a determin ation to do what a strong mind con ceived to be right and possible. It sets a high standard for future col lectors at the port of New York, too nign to offer much ground for the belief that it will ever be safe or nossible to return to the old order of things. The Forest Primeval. From the Kansas City Star. "God pity the lubbers ashore with the chimney pots a-fallin'." said the kind hearted mariner in the gale. In the northwest forests, where men should be secure from men if anywhere in the world, it is said that 150 men and women have died by fire and by incendiarism. The Fall Game. From the Baltimore American. Gridirons are being scoured for the usual sacrificial victims. Quite Lively. This is one of the off years in politics, but it is a pretty lively one. Insurgent Year. From Charleston News and Courier. Mr. Taft has doubtless noticed that in Nicaragua the Insurgents won. TWINKLES By PHILANDER JOHNSON. An Indebtedness. "You have found a study of the classics beneficial ?" s?.ld the professor. "Yes, indeed." replied Mrs. Cumrox. "We got a beautiful name for our yacht out of the classical dictionary." Marketing In Crimson Gulch. "What makes the butcher put both hands in the air? Is he afraid you are going to shoot?" "No." answered Broncho Bob. "He has gotten over being afraid. He knows I ain't going to shoot as long as he keeps his hands out of reach of the scales while the meat's beln' weighed." No Practical Difference. "I made a mistake," said young Mrs. Torklns, "and picked up my locket instead of the little gold watch you gave me." "Never mind." replied her husband. "The only difference is that the watch doesn't tell time and the locket doesn't even pretend to." U nan vied. Adam didn't par no rent. - His food was furnished free. He didn't need no circus tent For his menagerie. He didn't have to work at all. But simply pass de time Until.de fruit, both great an' small, Done ripen to its prime. - l Oh. you. Mistoh Adam! You sholy took your ease. But if I could change luck wif you, I'd say excuse me, please. Adam sho'ly were de boss. 1 But lonesome, jes' de same. He couldn't never swap a boss Nor see a base ball game. He couldn't staht a barber shop . Nor listen to de band. Nor meet dem lection folks dat stop To shako you by de nan. - Oh. you Mistoh Adam! Though you was Uvln' some, Fd rather be mo sociable An' take things as dey come.' SUX-TELEGRAM. MONDAY,

Stray Gossip From Gotham Town

New "York, Sept 5. The decrease in the demand for steel pens due to the general use of typewriters for correspondence purposes, combined with lack of progressiveneas on the part of the members of the firm, caused the failure the other day of the oldest pen concern in this city. It was founded In 1830 by the father of the two members of the

firm, who in those days did a flourishing business in goose quills ana j lead pencils. He waa responsible for the importation of the first steel ' t

pens used in the United States and for -half a century was the principal importer and dealer in steel pens in this city. He was succeeded by his sons in 1872 and, when the demand for steel pens decreased with the introduction of typewriters, the brothers tried to improve conditions by adding a line of stationery to their stock of trade. The experiment proved disastrous, however, and they were forced to go into voluntary bankruptcy. Only a few months ago a girl in Newark gained considerable notoriety and praise in the newspapers for the bravery which, according to her own statements, she displayed in an alleged encounter with a bold burglar in her aunt's house. If .the girl had chosen to rest upon her laurels, everything would have been well and she would have retained her reputation as an heroine to the end of her days. But the fame she had won by her first "deed of heroism" awakened a taste for more in the girl and she arranged another encounter with a fictitious burglar. Her raise en scene was so lacking in dramatic realism, however, that the prosaic detectives say through the threadbare plot and not only pronounced the whole thing a barefaced plant, but also strongly intimated their doubt of the genuineness of the first burglary yarn. Among the numerous queer characters that may be found in this cosmopolitan city there is probably none more queer than a certain ministerial looking negro of suave address and sanctimonious air, who makes the rounds of the city during the day, collecting charitable contributions for all kinds of negro charities, mostly in the South, while at night he thrills Bowery crowds with his indubitable prowess as a prize fighter. He is a clever boxer and has quite a reputation as a successful local pugilist throughout the Bowery zone. Even in the prize ring he never drops his sanctimonious air and in the beginning of his career he caused no little merriment and banter among his spectators, by kneeling down for a short prayer before the beginning of every bout. But the Bowery boys became used to his antics and, as he proved a clever and plucky fighter, they forgave him his little peculiarities and held the "Fighting Parson" in great respect. The sea serpent crop has utterly failed this year, but the season seems to have been decidedly favorable to the development of a fine spook crop. Spooks have been reported from time to time from a number of places around New York. The latest reports are from Newton, N. J., where a full-grown ghost is cutting up considerable in an isolated farmhouse, and from Montclair, N. J., where children and even grown persons are nightly terrified by the appearance of the black spook-cat, black, with bushy tail and fiery eyes.

SQUARE DEAL FDR THE TARIFF WANTED In His Address at Sioux Falls Saturday, Ex-President Roosevelt Says an Expert Commission Is Needed.

The following is the address of Col. Roosevelt at' Sioux Falls, S. D. Saturday. Sioux Falls. Sept. 3. Whenever men just like ourselves probably not much better and certainly no worse continually fall to give us the results we have a right to expect from their efforts we may just as well make our minds that the fault lies not In their personality, but in the conditions under which they work, and profit comes not from denouncing them, but in seeing that the conditions are changed. This is especially true of inr'ff making. It has been conclusively shown by experiments repeated again and again that the methods of tariff making by congress which have now obtained for so many years cannot from the very nature of the case bring really satisfactory results. I think that the present tariff Is better than the last and considerably better than the one before the last but it has certainly failed to give general satisfaction. I believe this country la fully committed to the principle of protection, but it Is to protection as a principle, to protection primarily in the Interest of the standard of living of the American workingman. 1 believe that when protection becomes not a principle, but a privilege and a preference or, rather, a jumble of privileges and preferences then the American people disapprove of It Now. to correct the trouble it Is necessary in the first place to get In mind clearly what we want and In the next place to get in mind clearly the method by which we hope to obtain what we want What we want Is a square deal in the tariff as in everything else a square deal for the wage earner, a square deal for the employer and a square deal for the general public. To obtain it we must have a thoroughly efficient and well equipped tariff commission. The tariff ought to be a material issue and not.a moral issue. - But if Instead of a square deal we get a crooked deal then it becomes very emphatically a moral issue. What we desire in a tariff Is such measure of protection "as will equalize the cost of production here and abroad, and as the cost of production Is. mainly labor cost this aeans primarily a tariff sufficient to make up for the difference in labor cost here and abroad. The American public wants the American laboring man put on an equality with other citizens, so that he shall have the ability to achieve the American standard of living and the capacity to enjoy it. and to do this we must see that bis wages are not lowered by Improper competition with inferior wageworkers abroad with wageworkers who are paid poorly and who live as no Americans are willing to live. But the American public does not wish to see the tariff to arranged as to benefit primarily a few wealthy men. Commiaaien of Experts. As a means toward tbe attainment of its end in view we have as yet devised nothing In any way as effective as a tariff commission. There should be a commission of well paid experts, men who should not represent any Industry, who should be masters of their subjects, of tbe very highest character and who should approach the matter with absolute disregard of every outside consideration. These men should take up in succession each subject with which the tariff deals and Investigate tbe conditions of production here and abroad. They should find out tbe facts and not merely accept tbe statements of Interested parties, and they should report to congress on each subject as soon ss that subject has been covered. t Then actlcan be, taea .at poet on SEPTEMBER 5, 1910.

tbe particular subject concerned, while the commission immediately proceeds to investigate another. By these means log rolling would be avoided and each subject treated on Its merits, while there would be no such shock to general industry as is implied in the present custom of making sweeping changes in tbe whole tariff at once. The same principle of a first class outside commission should be applied to river aud harbor legislation. At esent a river and harbor bill, like a .riff bill, tends to be settled by a oquabble among a lot of big selfish interests and little selfish Interests, with scant regard to the one really vital Interest, that of tbe general public. In this matter the' national legislature would do well to profit by tbe example of Massachusetts. Formerly Massachusetts dealt with Its land and harbor legislation just nsvat Washington tariff and river and harbor laws have been dealt with, and there were Juat tbe same pulling and hauling, the same bargaining and log rolling, the same subordination of tbe general interest to various special Interests.

A HEALTH MEETING (American News Service.) Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 5. Physicians, surgeons and. bacteriologists from all parts of the United Spates and from Canada, Mexico and Cuba have come to Milwaukee to attend tbe thirty-eighth annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, which opened today, and will continue until Friday night The object of the association is the development of the science and art of public hygiene and tbe promotion of public hygiene as a distinct profession. Along these lines a wide range of subjects has been prepared for disucsslon. The president of the association, who will preside at the meetings, is Dr. Charles R. Probst of Columbus, O. A C, Y, M, II. U, MEET (American News Service.) Cliff Haven. N. Y.. Sept 5. The thirty-sixth annual convention of the Catholic Young Men's National Union was opened here today with a special mass in the Church of Our Hody Lady of tbe Lake. Bishop Gabriels, of Ogdensburgh, waa the celebrant assisted by Mgr. Lavelle, rector of St Patrick's cathedral. New York City. Following the religious services the convention waa called to order by President William Sullivan, of Washington, D. C The business sessions, will continue over Tuesday and Wednesday. Accuracy at All Costs. Tbe race was a neck and neck one. The spectators ' stood with bated breath. No sound ws to be beard but the stampeding of the two horses hoofs and the ticking of tbe timekeeper's double patent extra special fracto declmo never stop stop watch. "Dead beat!" roared tbe spectators. A great roar rent the air. The timekeeper stepped forward and held up his band. -No. gentlemen!" be cried. "Botcher Boots was tbe winner. 1 timed him by this fracto declmo stop watch. There are sixty seconds in a minute, sixty doodans In a second and sixty wiffwaffs in a doodar. and Batcher Boots won by a quarter of a wiffwajr." London Mail. Plenty ef "Ha knows tbe best people la town -Why doesnt be associate with thenar "They know him." Cleveland Leader.

Heart to Heart

Talks. I : By EDWIN A. NYE. CQpyr&ht, 1908, by Edwin A. N) ltt COS! Or WAR. Ever see a battleship? There it awing at anchor, out in tbe harbor, a monster, bard iron flgutlni: ship. Cost $10,000,000! And in ten years that iiO.OOO.OCtf war machine will be Dt only for scrap iron. For lavish waste it la the limit. Figure the cost of the expensive engines of destruction aboard, the coat of ammunition for mere target practice, the cost of tbe food, drink and clothing of tbe half regiment of the crew trained to kill men and destroy ' property. Figure tbe cost of tbe mountains of coal needed to move the monster. And of tbe wages for the men. Waste! When yon hare computed the tremendous coat of this war vessel multiply tbe sum by the number of warships maintained by our navy and the navies of the world. And thenSupplement your calculation by a visit to one of our fort. Note tbe cost of the building, barracks, atables. drill balls, etc.. etc. Put Into your estimate tbe cost of forage and food and wages paid the officers and men. Multiply the sum by tbe number of our forts, add tbe cost of our war department and then guess at tbe tremendous millions paid in Europe for land armaments. All this in times of peace! And why? Because civilization is slow tn coming to tbe world. Because nations are prizefighters, bruisers rather than gentlemen! Do you say t be war vessel and tbe drilling soldiers thrill you? Yes, because of tbe savage that remains in all of us. But. rightly viewed, all tbe pomp and circumstance of war la a profoundly sad spectacle. Soldiers and cannon are tbe Indices of an Immature and groping world, groping alowly toward the day when tfie war drum throbs no longer. ' War Is waste. It is waste of great treasure aad precious human life. And as the nations build their Dreadnoughts and drill their troops they admit they are ages behind their own citizens, who get along without killing one anotber. However Civilization jrrows. and tbe nations slowly are adopting arbitration. Tb.it an earnest of the time when tbe battleflags shall be furled. INDIANS HONOR HIM Oregon Tribesmen Attend the Memorial Services Held for Father Croquet. AN ARCHBISHOP PRESIDED (American Newt Service.) Portland, Ore., Sept. 5. Four hundred Indians attended services at the old church of the Grande Ronde Indian reservation founded fifty years ago by Father Croquet aa a special memorial to the life and services of the faithful priest who labored among tbe coast tribes so long go. Archbishop Christie preached the anniversary sermon and confirmed a class of thirty novitiates. There were no fixed ceremonies in recognition of the work and' simple life of the missionary who followed the early trails on horseback, patiently enduring all the hardships of his pioneer life that he might spread enlightenment among the Indians. Many of the red men present remembered Father Croquet and were satisfied with the little prayer that fell from the lips of Archbishop Christie and the mass said for the repose of the soul of the dead priest While the work of Father Croquet required him to walk, ride horseback and swim streams that were unbridged, : Archbishop Christie reached the famous old church In an automobile, so rapid has been tbe settlement of the country that Father Croquet found a wilderness. . r9"a" ' The composition of Kutfllsu brass Is about seveuty mrt copper and thirty of zinc. Trluce fiprt's metal" contains 75 to W er i-pot of coper and, on account of its golden color. Is employed to ome extent lu jewelry. Tbe kind of brass culled tombac contains still more copjier. nearly eighty, five parts in a hundred. It is tbe alloy used for the manufacture of what la called Dutch metsL an imitation of gold leaf. It can be rolled into sheets, and these can he beaten out till tber are only fifty-three thousandths of an taAJBjfk lea - a.n - - At Fez As!s fcr ill n n HALTED HO LCi Tfca Fcsdrf2r. izr 12 'At restaurant, hotels, and fonsaains. Denooos, favigorating and agatamhs. Keeo k on votn airlrhoard at kome. Don't travel without If A ca i. at j tfcgsroa a a saaa, Takaisaisau JsaaJaayTXlKXS.Co OczzZteo cr Treat PAGE FIVE