South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 316, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 11 November 1916 — Page 4
r. i it vif. 1 1 ,r inu.nOA, .OVllMlit,K 11, lyitf. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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q si Yj.-m-j OV'T TT7A7Q TTlyf'F'Q ' national convention itseir, and tne conauct or jUU 1 II jilJlD NJiLVYO- I lIYlD:tho (.,i:nr,aiKn ever since the convention, would have
Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN nnNUr zuvnn. editor. GABf.IEL, n. SUMMi;i:S, Publisher.
f'Vl,Y At;ci Viv.l ruis MOitMJro FRAN"'? They were lost in conM-juence. ffei irV;:! lUU out of the Kreat west 'Man J of
WtLTil lif.M No tv-r " :;;fln!-(ai)ie the answer. It is the hold.
by t' .ul wir. n.r-i a'i i.i. '. ',,. ,
llolidaji. Cated at tie Sutt lieud VSu um aeooad th east. When I'rest Wilson and democracy broke daxs ruall. j the power (t the east over tin whole country by the THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY j regional bank und farm loan systems, he gave the wide 1 " . . ' ... ,vf-r a- I ranse of country a control over itself that it will never 7ice: 110 W. Coiiax At. M Vd rioiie 1151 B11 1 bme ! t-'ive up. L'ncle Sain from the Rooky's loftiest r-eak has
O-il t tbe cffVe jT trpr. "bote number and fo j.rtiient maD' -T-K-lit.-nil. A-lwrtisir.. Circulation, or Acilrmorj. bH- will be m..Ul after lr.hrtIon. IP-irt inattention to bus.ne-x Ln.l e-3tion. rnr delivery of P!; JfJ telephone erv!. et.-., to b n 1 ' f-prtment Ub ythch J0 re tftoiiinjT. Te New-Ti-- Mi thiTtn trunk Uu.-, til ol V&kn respond to Kurre i'V 11-1 üell 2100.
srnsrniPTIOX HATKS: Morning and nycnltj: E41U9M, F re e Cony a J-on -ay. So; M'-rnlnc r KTcntng Ldltloo, uitr. in-Jidlai:' Vun-iMj. t.y uJ. ? '.o p -r jr iu advance. U-liVfr-'d" bj- -,!rriT in South 1'.: -1 and Mlihawa. W-W P yvar la &4tflace, or X2-' by tie week.
AJVr.RTI!SI'0 ICATKS: Ask ft rdrr? iünr rVopartrnent. , uni learn TVrelrn Art tertian ir Kcprcientativfsr COMi LOHKNZKN WOOD1LV.N. 2T Fifth at. New Yo.C lty and AdT. , as i(
O.a.-Hffo. Tlie rwR-T1im-H endeavo. o kp . its f1" ,ank law went into ecect. It will force a larger recogcolumra free frora fraudulent msreprt se ntition. Any pero lefraud.i ttir-:js-h patrona f eny airertiment in tn : nition of the rights of men beyond the Mississippi, and Murr will ot.nfr a favor oa tie mauisemeut bf reporting j . fa-u consplcUlj. 1 victory is well worth while regardless of all
NOVl:MlU:R 11, 1M().
UNLOCKING PUBLIC LANDS. A "conrej-s of public land states" is to be held in Den, -er son, to di.-' us the problem of the public domain. It will be participated m by ti e representatives twenty-live states. Iu. altitude is expected to be extremely critical of the established federal policy toward the development of public landd. The states concerned feel that they are unduly inifs:- ' on by present restrictions. They want to give pri' capital easier access to the soil, timber, water and mineral, and they want their own state goernments to posess greater authority in the distribution and control of these resources. There are certainly grounds for complaint and room for improvement, Congress has lagged in working out a reasonable conservation program. And tho eastern .-tated have failed in many thiir-s to understand or sympathize with the iewpoint of the western and -o:itr.ern states within whose boundaries the resources lie. They do not appreciate the local conditions and needs of the puMi-- l ind states,, and they tolerate a .-tand-pat policy which keeps everybody away from the avail ible wealth lest somebody should get more than his share. The public land states, however, lay themselves oppn to criticism .n the i attitude of sole proprietorship. They are prone to for.?et that the lands in question are not rnogether theirs. With few exceptions, the states in question had nothing to do with the acquisition of that pubjic domain. It was either given to the nation by the otiginal states or bouuhi by the federal government with money paid by the older states. The original states surrendered riuhts to the federal government. The federal government conferred rights on the new states. The fundamental resources of the new stat'.s belonged to the nation as a whole. It is bardly fair, then, to assert, as many western conservationists do. tlr;t the federal government of which they are a part, is usurping power over their own property. East, weit and south ought to get together on this matter and straighten it out alonu more liberal lines, making every material resource eligible to full development and at the same time safeguarding the common interest of the nati.-n.
NOT POP SCHOOL HOYS. We are not in hearty accora with the movement of
San Francisco business men to send
Stanford university men to join the American ambulance corps in France. It may be selfish, but we would like to keep all our university graduates at home and not offer t'u-m up as sacrifices to the insatiable maw of Ku rope's war. Who knows but there may be an embryo president of the United States among the lot? We -sympathize with war torn Furope. not ahme with
the allies, but with the people w lied by the war. We would gladly
wealth to aid then.; we would willingly shale the new world's bounteous prosperity with the suffering millions of the old, but we are prone to draw the line at -ending America, s oung manhood to 1'urope, to return inoculated wuh the war germ, if indeed they return at all. We are drawing heavily upon America- Enking fand when we Jo.
THE: )" COULDN'T BLG IT, THLV COULDN'T BUY IT, THEY COULDN'T STEAL IT. It is the answer to the republican failure, wherever it prevailed ii the country; they couldn't beg it, they wouldn't buy it. they couldn't steal it neither bluff.
guff. nor bullion, w ere 'suihVicat for
j.rae ticallv everywhere north of the Maou and Dixon I " '.... .u. hue. the Wilson vote represents to the extent of about ! trfe Unts 2'00 lrfe a
.in average of one --third, a reduction P'l.'IUatl Vet', on tile :.;.-; OI a I
progressive reunbm. It evidences just that much per- j their being set only on the north side. Hut the railnancfit breaking-away from the republican political road alo takes just pride in th fact that the long, vohol, suiticitiit in i-pcis to ;;iu the president his elec-j green line replacing the unsightly fences will add im-
toral iv. ij'T-.tv. t Wilj-i.n is n-t-lt'i tc i:res'-i ..-. S"eiaiists. and Rulers wh'i ludd p..tii"ti-; I r ;nc ;! a : e p";'p k i :' i"ui:ner ) i a ;., :' cur. - M e-rv mu h i: lr.d;.i:;a. ;;!.-:de .-'t. pte-r-t lU s'.iri.i' e md-e itii !.s h...'d Ct.MM.l th tt' H'U !'. ' i-; ": what v idt-iu-ed. 1 ' i ' -1 . .- r in them b-.al oiks, er.-UJh, lf..t i all. staiu C. ; .d si pub lie an ticket t' t IP s and '. i are m. Wil-on." 1 ;t pr e t. :.dt tieke t. especially N v Va' and inertly ! on har.d-d .; ! :.. cres-ivts, i'i tbf r s.:.t - b ; o- i Th. hae N-w and Wats-'M. 1 Hih.-s -rrsth:r.g th-it :h , ; i 1 t i 't wai.t that tiny did want the f..!non.-nt of ating law of it tr:l-uti'". o n
;. w a rr.ing fro::: the start.
tie repui t; an L?.e ttulc ticket, the dc!e.vat s to the
Sem on continuous 1 - n in the continuance of "old ! i't:nrdini." that anjthin? hut a blind man should have
sn. nut, or cowry, tnere was Teddy, ready to leaa them "into the jaws of death; Into the mouth of hell," if necesd-try "anything to beat Wilson," and "habit, that reat defiler of our better t-elves," did the rest. No, they couldn't resist Teddy. They had followed in
l his rut too Ion?,
placed hi.- thumb to hin nose, and signaled the Bulls and Iar that ror.m the Ai'palachlans and Adirondacks. and down the eastern seaboard, to stay there and prey upon themselves. The west Is merely rominj,' into its own. It is becinnint; to assert itself. The land of the cowboy and the buffalo, is merely reasserting its old vigor, asertinR its virility here in the language of the larger civilization, as it once did in the language of the plain. The west is learning to talk with ballots, with the same independence as it used to talk with bullets. The east
The 'ealed from some fifty oJi ho are being cruel-j give of America's j the d.iy. From in thn normal re-
j The primary purpose appears to be utility. The trees
. . I . . - , V I'lllj'il 1C I epUUlie .111 , - l nini-iinm rcpat-liean pro-lmit-peT.uriu votes ny partisanship. and - e, it doe sn't apply Ji'.-ph county, if but eve at that ! lane of trees, with
It wasn't strong j quietness and their shutting out of the ugly sights that Indiana, for in- j are typical of railroads in the Tnited States. There I wlu eded the re-j a. gratifwng tendency on the part of big transportation
"anything to beat Mines to plant tres i thing for th state j it has been done (ok -drich. have genuine asset ami letter t pe of pro- i e ner i i o gotten ijoodnch. j DRY. Virginia clo.-ed l- l..t. They got i
.i . l !"t e er thing : jna'ixjng the eighteenth state to go wholly dry.
a p.. r fee lly oper ! The law passed ! 1 1 ..11 e'OJer, can oe t-tmi po.e s'ieui of more gallons of beer will of intent to violate state en ei.tion. nation il conven-
and worn it too deep to set out of it.
the western sea" deliant. aggressive doom of its nation-wide domination the moment that the federal reserve
partisan considerations. Pres't "Wilson has been paid the highest compliment that could possibly com.e to the head of the nation. He secured his dection from sources heretofore regarded as insiirnilicant in the choice of presidents; the sturdy backboned people, who have never learned that splendid civilized art of worshipping, bowing to. and simpering before the god of wealth, or cultivated the spineles.-ness essential to being fearful of its power. They refused to he bluffed, bewared, boughten, or robbt d. and that settled it.
ELECTIONS AND COAL. Regardless of party affiliations here is good news for everybody. Coal has come down. Perhaps you were duuppointed in the election, but the final settlement of the question seems to have brought about one result that even republicans can get much cheer from. It is: coal has come down. Figures from New York state that anthracite coal is selling in that city at JS.50 to $10 a ton. Before election they were payinr $12 to $l-.r.O. Perhaps there is no connection between the price of coal and election, but before the election coal was high; since election day it has been dropping. The New York dealers find an easy explanation for the drop in the price of coal. Milder weather and the fact that the public has recovered from its recent "panic" they say is responsible. They also way that the "panic" caused the people to rush into the market for fear that the price would go still higher. They filled their bins with coal and since coal bins are filled, there is a drop in price. This fear must have begun somewhere. It must have been given the start. Perhaps the big ccal dealers were not responsible for starting the "panic." Perhaps it does not lie in their province. Perhaps they hated to accept those extra two or four dollars a ton for coal. Perhaps their plea that it cost more to mine it, held good before the election. Perhaps, but coal has come down. There seems to be a liberal supply of the fuel at present. There are no more scares that factories will have to close down because they are unable to get sufficient coal. There are no more predictions of further boosts in price. Perhaps the election may have had something to do with it. Perhaps the boost in price may have been part of the plan to yell high cost of living. In these last few days things have moved. They started moving right after election day and if our memory serves us right, it was not Mr. Wilson who was leading in the early returns. Among the things to move was coal. Cars laden with coal began reaching their destination right after election day. Naturally with coal cars arriving at their destination, there was no scarcity of coal and prices just had to drop. Denial of charges that coal cars were being held UP were made by the railroads. There was a scarcity of cars it was alleged. The price was the result of ihe demand with a limited supply. Now the supply has passed the demand, hence, coal has come down. Thursday the weather bureau issued a statement that real winter weather would grip the country. Ccal did not go up. Coal came down. Yes, there are a lot of us glael the election is over. Those cars side tracked at Lapaz last week until further orders, will now probably move under further orders.
RAILROAD TREES. The Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie railway planting trees all along its right of way, clear to
1 1 .. . . 1 ft . . 1 I .mv --i" - v .uv.. ina. t.t'iaii-i
mensely to the attractiveness of its right of way. And eventually there will probably be a Ce-rresponding line of trees on the other side of the track, set there for beauty. What a relief it would be on any railroad to pass beiur aftt-r "hour, in the summer time, through a leafy
their suggestion of coolness and for that very purpose, and Wherever the improvement is found to be a a stimulus to passenger traffic. SAVE AS TO CIDER. all saloons at midnight o'. Oct. Zl. is very drastic. No beverage, except . 1 . . . 1, ...... . Ä - 1 . 1 . 1 1 mai mh's a irate ui anonoi anu than one gallon of win or three be regarded as prima facie e idence the law.
The Public Pulse
(mm tmVxtJort for tM edtnaa may b tlcnrt ttrmnjwomly bt melt be nefMiaxrnleiJ by the rtae ef tht writer t. Insure ror-d ttfth. Nt reprwuKdllty for fart or tentlni-nti uprnwwf d will b Mtrmed. Uoot d torn Ion of pvrWl qnectloo ta laritrd. bot wltb tie rlrbt rrred t eliminate Tlelotri and object sable matter. Tfee eolirtao !a tree. Bot, b reasonable. itnviirws wibso.vü rxixTiov. Cditor News-Times: Please publish this as a message to the president for the public consumption : Mr. President, you have been elected to succeed yourself. None of us think you wanted to hold your job for what was in it for you. but that you really wanted the recorded approval of your countrymen. The approval seems not to be cordially unanimous. Thousands of us cast adrift from former political associations to stand with you because we believed you better than what your party has been. Your superiority seems to have cost you an almost equal number of former supporters. This election means, if anything, that the nation as a whole is not entirely satisfied with your administration. That you have neglected some things while overdoing others. No wonder, for what president has had the giant, multiple and interlocking problems you have had? Underneath your visible failures we see your efforts to meet the situation honorably, with sympathy for all. not any class, of your fellow men. Your opponent made much of what he said should be done in the name of patriotism, lly making capital of your failures he reduced your prestige nearly to the point of defeat. His assumption of patriotism would have carried him to victory bad it not been for his known, though ably concealed, attachment to a class whom we are learning to regard us parasites on our economic existence. "We know you to be guiltless of such an attachment. We approve your opponent's expressed foreign policy. As a people we insist that the persons of our fellow Americans in their legitimate pursuit of liberty and happiness, wherever they may be, shall he held sacred by everyone; and will defend them by force of arms. We further believe that when our fellows take their capital beyond our borders and with it exploit the people of other countries, they should be compelled to depend on such countries for its protection, or protect it themselves. We certainly see no reason why we should risk our own lives in defense of such capital, so abused. I mean Mexico, and the Lusitania case. We will defend innocent American lives anywhere, but we are gunshy when it is a case of defending other people's dollar. This is why it is so difficult to get men behind the guns made in other than government plants, for profit of the makers. Your opponent decries the government armor plant, for reasons perfectly satisfactory to his backers, if not to ourselves. I am attempting, obscurely maybe, to explain to you a situation which seems to have puzzled ou, and perhaps discouraged you because you misunderstood it, thinking it because we did not care. You have partially failed, because you did not fully understand or perhaps trust us. Now you should know exactly what we want. We are going to keep you on the job and give you another chance, but you must stiffen up and make good. We did not employ your opponent because we questioned his integrity. We have told you in no uncertain voice to go directly ahead, and give us the chance to help you. Px-Soldler and Kx-Itepublican. WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS Tili: VANISIIFD FAMILY CAItKIACii:. (Indianapolis Star.) It is not so very many years since an automobile was the unusual veh."le anel the horse-drawn conveyance the rule on city streets; not so very long since people turned to stare at the motor car as it rolled proudly by. For that matter, even yet, men ami women whose t yes anel habits were long adjusted to the horse as a motive power are sometimes disposed to rub their eyes as they see the scores of horseless carriage fly past and to wonder what magic wand is at work. Much more recently have the auto hearse and motor tars for funerals come into use and th sensations of many persons on lirst seeing them must have, been like those experienced by James Whitcomb Ililey on a similar occasion. Years ago when the poet began his platform work, a winter tour took him into northern New York. There he beheld a long funeral procession windings its way over the snow roads on runners. Always before he had associated the occasional sleigh in Indiana with gayety and festivities and to see it transformed into solemn uses at once ! shocked him and appealed to his
sense of humor. The incident impressed him and he afterward referred to it with laughter. The automobile is to many persons still chiefly a pleasure vehicle and is associated with funerals only with an effort. But automobiles were a familiar sight on city streets long before they were welcome on country roads. Farmers frowned on them and did worse than frown when their horses shied or reared or ran at the unaccustomed sight. Yet this is what happened the other day over in Hancock county and might happen in many ether counties of the state: A woman invalid, when near the point of death whispered a request that horses be used to draw the hearse at
THE MELTING POT
Conducted by
TIlMli:iLVCIi Some people take their pleasures in coagulated lumps. Their dancing Is a series of extremely fancy jumps; Their drinking is a large attempt at emptying the tank; Their spending is a merry plan for cleaning out the bank. They fashion all their joys upon the very largest, scales And when they go to fish they always bait the hook for whales. And in th. intervals, as you have accurately guessed. These merry souls are frequently and horribly depressed, lhe mountains with the tallest peaks the human eye ha.s seen Are marked by valleys dep and dark ami dangerous between; While few of us may merrily succeed in getting by, Exclusively impinging on the pla ces that are high. .o as for me, Pd rather touch the mediocre point. Than la.-di my placid blood to foam and dislocate my joint? Endeavoring to step across upon the mountain tcps And getting such a series of so disappointing1 drops. I do not ask for heaping cups of ecstasy divine Just pour a little calm and quiet happiness in mine.
'Twas a big day for the Prohibitionists, those in Tennessee choosing Rye while the voters in New Jersey defeated Martine. BAMIFUI;. Nod's such a bashful fellow lie Cannot, wltliout confusion, I Unbrace an opportunity Or hu a fond delusion. Boston Transcript. A bashful fellow tliat I know Is Albert Allen Hulls. Who cannot watch witliout a blush Two ki-vdmr billiard balls. S. II. C. o Oh. yes, it was a real university girl who wrote home and informed her parents that she was learning the "rudiments of antiseptic dancing." Wonder was she any relation to the young lady who announced seriously that "tennis was her pet aversion." Hen Lindsoy Tries (iin. (Everybody's Magazine). Judge Undsey of Denver was lunching one hot day when a politician paused beside his table. "Judge", he said, "i sec you're drinking coffee. That's a heating drink. In this weather you want to drink iced drinks, Judge sharp her funeral and that the family go in a carriage, Such a request was sacred, but it proved to be difficult to observe. The undertaker, who was accustomed to use an automobile hearse, was put to trouble to find one of the old fashion, while in all the legion about but one family carriage could be found and that an old shabby vehicle. Every farmer had disposed of his "surrey" or "Kellogg or other vehicle of their type and had substituted a motor car. The family rode to the cemetery in the old old carriage, and the neighbors followed in their cars. Verily, times change and Indiana farmers with them. UN M XT U. L Pit 0 1 1 ".SSO IIS. (Cleveland Plain Dealers.) College professors, despite their supposedly detached viewpoints, have in many instances notably disregarded American neutrality. Many of them have taken a prominent part in disseminating propaganda in behalf of one European belligerent or the other. The great majority of these have spoken in behalf of France and Fngland; but a few, some of them of German birth, have taken up the cudgels in behalf of Germany and have labored so industriously that one may wonder how they find time for their routine educational duties. Most notable of all is Hugo Munsterberg, professor of psychology at Harvard. He is probably the most eminent and certainly one of the most active of the German propagandists in this country. He has written several books in defense of Germany's position and his public utterances have been frequent and forceful. There has been recently published an intercepted letter, written by Dr. Munsterberg to the imperial German chancellor, which appeared to place the professor in the attitude of an officially recognized adjunct of the German government. Aä a result of this disclosure new pressure has been brought to bear upon the president and fellows of Harvard to separate the professor from his Cambridge connection. It is held that his value as an instructor of American young men is destroyed by his un-American attitude. The latest manifestation is a resolution, adopted by an organization calling itself the "AJnerican Ilights league." It demands the immediate retirement of Dr. Munsterberg. and strangely enough, some of the signers are Dr. Munsterbenr's fellow-professors at Harvard. There is, assuredly, ground for sympathy with the attitude cf these educators and college graduates who feel that uniersities should be kept out of war. Inasmuch as Dr. Mun-stert-erg id the most notable of all the unneutral pedagogs, it is but natural that he receives the brunt of the attack. But it is very doubtful either Munsterterg or any other pro-German or anti-German professor can exercise any appreciable influence on American public sentiment.
I.Y.NCHINGS. (Ogden, Utah, Kxaminr.) Now cornea Indiana and Ohio with the claim that their legislators have discovered a preventative for lynchings. Their proposition is to have any sheriff automatically removed from tr!k.e if any( prisoner Lt taken from him and summarily executed. The only way the orhcer may regain his position is for him to prove he endeavored in every' possible way to prevent losing the one in charge. Fine idea is that. Not only is the reponAiiility of
Stuart H. Carroll
A. B. B. iced tlrinks. Did you ever try gin and ginger ale?' "No." said the judge, smiling, "but I've tried several fellows who have." The best newspaper poem of the week is sent in by If. R. The title is "Weed and Youth" and it is from the New York Sun: I'm only a wool in tlie garden. Hut the sun is bright to mo; The air is wamt, the birdrs are nesar, Tlicy rest in my friend the tree. The rain and tto air and the sunshine Iut I lie iwvr of grow th In mc; I struggle up to achieve my end, I joy In the life to 1k They tell mo I mar the sarden. But It's quite like homo to me. I know I'm pluin, but I want my chanceI want to Ik wilil ami free. I hear the sound of the siekle; It sounds like death to inc. Why should I fall? I m not to blame, Rut I bow to its Ooarp decree. I'm only a youth 'u trie trenches, Hut the worM is sweet to me. The sickle of d.xith makes a hissing sound, I'm a weed on the Isirren lea. apprehending and ferreting out criminals to be placed upon the sheriff but also he is to he made responsible for the outburst of any mob spirit among his townsmen. Single-handed he must fight the good fight and then if overpowered and he loses his prisoner, he must go to the expense of time and finance to maintain proceedings which may bring back to him the position he lost. The burden of proof will be upon him. We fancy under such laws the job of sheriff will possess little attraction in those states. A more inconsistent method of remedying deplorable conditions in modern society could not have been evolved. The burden of the disgrace is upon the citizens of any community in which lynching;? occur and that is because the so-called good citizens of a place do not at once spring to the aid of the officers and prevent mob violence. Some mobs composed of 100 men have committed these outrages in communities where several thousand so-called good citizens have kept away from the scene and let the cowardly and despicable mob-gangsters tear suspected men or even acknowledged criminals from the very sanctuary of the law. The remedy would seem to be with laws which would make it incumbent on the citizenry to aid officers, and, above everything else, to make such drastic provisions that if any of the mob members are apprehended they be tried and visited with punisshment under a state provision which would remove their trial and conviction from a section where the local sentiment might favor their exculpation or acquittal. The Ohio and Indiana laws seem to contemplate the punishment oft tVie finh' mnn u-Vi- tn:iv K rlnin' Vtiv I -. . ... j ... ...... ... fc J ' ' . . -.J ... !) . . . . duty and acting the part of a brave and a loyal citizen. hfxtpj: ron ki:i:pig n vrc.irTKIIS. (New P.epublic, New York.) The big cities of thLs country are being deluged today with a flood of daughters fleeing from shelter, leaving behind distressed, or fearful, or angry' parents, who can talk only of their own fears, sacrifices and rights. The whole trouble lies in our tenacious lelief in the supreme excellence of ourselves, our circle, our church, our way. Of course, if I believe that my beliefs, my tastes, my habits, my conventions arc the only right or desirable ones in the world, then naturally I mu2t try" to impose them on my child. I must employ the methods of the inquisition to save her mind and soul. I must echo the familiar phrase of the btunned parent who would "rather see her in her grave" than married to the man she wants to marry if I don't think his tastes in gods or limousines or bronzes are what they ought to be. Iiut. if I believe, as I ought to, that X hold my leIieXs, my conventions and my tastes, simply because they happen to appeal to my own particular mental and physical make up, then I have no ri?ht to assume that my child must hold the-m too. The only intelligent thing for me to do is to look for the difference and be interested in it. And if I want her friendship, as I always say I do, I mut be the sort of person with whom she can compare notes upon the way. In short, the only way that I can keep my child is to give up every claim upon her; to cease, in fact, to take advantage of the accident by which nature made me her iAftnL
u u i us
Every rnan...5ay5ThpFra. i5 a dam fool for at least five minutes every fay.
Yi5dom
not Exceeding this limit How does thi5 strike ypu...Do you need HELP! -..Then ub tfie HELP-WANTED col oflhi5NnY5Puper.
.a
ORIGINAL
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