Walkerton Independent, Volume 33, Number 45, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 24 April 1908 — Page 2

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Washington.—ls the king of Italy should die, and his son, the prince of I iedmont, and his cousins, the duke of Aosta and the count of Turin, and the duke s two sons, the Prince Amadeo and the Prince Aimone. then the duke of the Abruzzi would be king. It is a remote possibility, of course, but the chance has given great international significance to the impetuous • uit of the popular duke of the Abruzzi for the hand of that athletic and charming American beauty. Miss Katherine Elkins, daughter of the senator from West Virginia. But should it all go right; should the king of Italy give his consent —to say nothing of Mr. Elkins—then the senator s daughter will come nearer being a queen than any American girl has ever been before. There is nothing in the Italian law to prevent it. If the marriage is legally consented to by the king, the duch•ess of the Ahrnzzi among Italian rortkftyx*- And •snOUTT chance make her husband king, she would be , queen. Think of it —an American girl queen of Italy! Everybody in Washington knows Miss Katherine Elkins. She made her -debut in 1903—she is 25 years old now. Her father is a multi-millionaire, owning railroads, mines and lumber enterprises enough to capitalize the kingdom of Italy. Her grandfather, Henry Gassaway Davis, once a senator, too, is also a vastly ;ich man —so rich that he ran for vice-president once. Much of this wealth will eventually go to Miss Elkins. Just now Miss Elkins has $2,000,000 which she can call her own. Insisted on Her Own Way. When Miss Elkins was ready to enter society she showed ot what stuff •she was made. She ruled against anything that savored of just a debutante lea. “If I can't come out without this nonsense,” she declared, “I won’t come out at all.” So it went on, season after season, until the d'ike of the Abruzzi came here. He had met American girls before, but here was a different kind. This particular pair met at the Italian embassy. The duke had come to America in command of the Italian warships sent to take part in the festivities at Jamestown. It was very apparent that Miss Elkins made a deep impression upon the duke. He not only lost no opportunity to be near her, but he developed a ready wit in making other opportunities. The Italian warships sailed back to sunny Italy. The duke was in command and perforce had to go along. Washington forgot he had ever been there. But not the duke! Nor Miss Elkins. In the summer she went abroad with her mother, as usual. It chanced that the duke of the Abruzzi ran across the Elkins party in Paris. They met again in Vienna. Drawn Back to America. Though there was no Italian fleet to come here in the autumn, the duke of W ***' W 'W ■lf**"

HATE BOUND TO BREED HATE

Nothing Truer Than That Revengeful,' Bitter Thoughts Will Inevitably Recoil on Those That Harbor Them. How little we realize when we throw thunderbolts of hat d toward another that these terrib thought shafts always come back and wound j the sender, that all the hateful, re-1 vengeful, bitter thoughts intended fori another are great javelins hurled at | ourselves! How many people go through life] lacerated and bleeding from these 1 thrusts which were intended for ot hers! Think of what people who refuse to | speak to another, because of some i fancied grievance or wrong, are really | doing to themselves! How this venom j intended for another poisons their own । minds and cripples their efficiency! | A kindly feeling a feeling of good will toward another, is our best pro-1 lection against bitter hatred or in-1 jurious thoughts of any kind. Noth-1 ins can penetrate the love shield, the ,

I the Abruzzi found it necessary to come to America. He also chanced to be wherever the Elkins family were. When Miss Elkins came to New York, a few weeks ago, the duke was there! When it was announced that she and li6r mother were going to Florida for a brief outing, the duke of the Abruzzi decided to run down there, too. They went to Palm Beach. Nobody there knew the fascinating Italian who was so devoted to Miss Elkins, and somehow it happened that no one got a chance to meet him. Had Palm Beach only known it —Miss Elkins’ “new man" was none other than a possible successor to the Italian throne! The little party journeyed on to St. Augustine. There the secret came out. People began to ask questions. Could a prince of the blood royal make honest love to an American girl? Would not such an aliance be morganatic of itself? Italian law was looked up—no, if the king consented, it wouldn't matter who the wife was at all. Queens in Italy enjoy but courtesy titles, any- । way; should the duke of the Abruzzi become king his wife would surely be queen in name. Then came the gossip. Was there an engagement? Had the Italian duke proposed to the American girl? What would the king of Italy say? What would Senator Elkins say? Did they love each other? What would * the dot be? Elkins Family Say Nothing. The Elkins family became quite mute. No announcement could be had from either the young woman in question or her distinguished father. Meanwhile the cables to Rome were kept hot. Would his majesty give his consent? His majesty didn’t want to. He felt that a royal prince should marry into a noble family. “But I love her,” was the gist of the duke’s cable in reply. And what could the poor king do? Meanwhile Senator Elkins had to endure all kinds of chaffing in the senate. On March 17 Mrs. Elkins. Miss Elkins and the duke arrived in Washington from Florida. The party break fasted together at the Elkins home, Italian embassy.' - peared. Bland smiles were the only answers to inquiries for the duke. At the Elkins home no information was forthcoming. It was very plain that the duke must do the talking iirst. But he wouldn't. He stayed in Washington for a few days, constantly calling at the Elkins home. Society got out its I blue books. Soon it was discovered । that he wouldn't have to give up his i chances to the Italian throne should Ihe make an American girl his wife. ■ Further, it was explained that the marriage need not be a morganatic one. provided the king of Italy gave his consent. However, there was all kinds of deI lightful mystery in Washington and ! Rome. Not a word that was authori- | tative was formally spoken. The Elkins family were mum; so was the [ Italian court. “It’s All Right,” Says the Duke. Then the gallant duke decided it was time to take a hand himself. It wouldn't do to leave Washington by train in the regular way—that would attract too much attention. So he had Miss Elkins take him to Baltimore in ; her automobile, and there he took the I : train to New York, where the Lusi- | I tania was waiting to sail. “It’s all right.” was all he would say before the ship sailed with "Signor Sarto,” as he choose to call himself. Promptly the cables began to buzz. Rome declared that the duke of the Abruzzi was coming home in order to get the king's full consent to his marriage with the American girl; that she would become a Roman Catholic; that her father would be ennobled, and that the marriage would take place here I next autumn. Once the dispensation is obtained from the Vatican, the marriage may be solemnized anywhere in the world. The rule of the church, however, is that the bride’s parish is the proper place for the ceremony. Because of this the marriage—if there is to be one —will be celebrated in the United States and not in Italy. Italian law requires that the minister of the interior : and the president of the senate be "■<» RM 'F "'"P"' ~ —«v r ~~Rl ir ■W 11 ” ~*M'

I good-will shield. We are unharmed behind that. It does not matter what feelings of revenge and jealousy a person may have toward us, if we hold the love thought, the charitable thought toward him. his javelins of hate will glance from us, fly back and wound | only himself. How easily, beautifully and sweetly ; some people go through life, with very I little to jar them or to disturb their j equanimity. They have no discord in I their lives because their natures are ! harmonious. They seem to love everyi body, and everybody loves them. They i have no enemies, hence little suffering : or trouble, says O. S. Marden, in Suc- ’ cess Magazine. Others, with ugly, crabbed, crossI grained dispositions, are always in hot water. They are always misunder- ’ stood. People are constantly hurting them. They generate discord because ; they are discordant themselves. He is lifeless that is faultless, de dares a French proverb.

present at the wedding and certify io | it. That is. if it takes place in Italy; i but if it takes place in America, the presence and certification of an Italian consul or ambassador is all that is necessary. The duke earnestly objected to any talk about a dot. He is rich in his own name; he declared that if Miss Elkins was to have any money it was I none of his affair. Duke Born in Madrid. Luigi Amadeo, now duke of the Abruzzi. was born in Madrid in 1573. just i 13 days before his father abdicated, i He has two older brothers, the prince I of Aosta and the count of Turin. Be- 1 fore them, however, comes the king of ! Italy’s son. Crown Prince Umberto, four years old. The prince of Aosta has two sons, six and four years old, all of whom, beside the count of Turin, stand between the duke of the Abruzzi and the throne. Though he stands high in the Ita liau navy, the duke of the Abruzzi gets ■ his chief claim to fame as an explorer and mountain climber. Nine years ago he ascended Mount St. Ellas, in Alaska, one of the tallest American peaks. Two years later he nought the north pole. One of his party reached 86 degrees 33 minutes north, beating Nansen and holding the world's record until Peary beat it. His Name Free from Scandal. Clean-lived and with his name untouched by any kind of scandal, he entertains the most romantic affection tor his aunt. Queen Marguerite, who played the part of a mother to him after the death of Queen Victoria, while he was yet in infancy. He has shown his devotion in many touching ways. When he scaled and explored Ruwenzori, he gave her name to its loftiest peak. He is the third of three brothers, the two elder being the duke of Aosta and the count of Turin. He has also a half-brother. Count Salemi, the issue of his father's marriage to ■ 1 Princess Letitia Bonaparte. The fortune of the duke of the Abruzzi is estimated at 82.000,000, He has less than his brothers, owing to : the fact that he has met personally the i expenses of his various expeditions, ; but there is still more property yet to ' be divided among the brothers. He < has a private income from his moth I

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TOMBS OF SPANISH ROYALTY

Most Gorgeous Burial Vault in the World Is That in Which Repose the Bodies of Spain's Former Rulers. The escurial in which for nearly three centuries the kings and queens of Spain have been buried is said to be the most gorgeous burial' vault in the world. it is an octagonal chamber, .36 feet across, with its walls, save where the coffins stand, entirely overlaid with precious marbles. The staircase which leads to it is of marble with jasper walls. The general effect is unspeakably splendid. Tn the midst of this magnificence are the massive black marble caskets let into the walls, con taining the bodies themselves. They are all exactly alike, inscribed simply with the names of the different kings and queens. There is room for just six more monarchs ami their consorts. Os another character altogether is the vault devoted to Spain’s royal children —princes and princesses. Here white marble rules, and very

> I er's estate of about slo.o^ F ar ‘ Aa an admiral of the royal V ie ' ceives an annual sa^*U about । $6,000 and from the roj-qj SUI- - close to SIOO.OGP ear As the duke spends ' lis time exploring the wildst the dangerous corners of > orld. it is reasonable to suppose3h* b ’ s W " 1 will be his companion future I expeditions. As Miss is a thor ! ough sportswoman, sl~ s doubtless as capable as any P scaling । mountain peaks. Sht? s ®v en inti j mated to some of he^ intimat< girl friends that she sj, ie duke wiH spend their honeymoQj 1 an ex P e ^’' tion to some out of tA a - v corner 01 the globe. Met at Washiri! n Ball ‘ The duke met Miss^' 118 at a in Washington giveni and ^ ls i.arz Anderson. o O |romwell, a ‘ de to President Rooseve$ n t rodnced lke handsome young Italq P r ' ncß to senator's daughter, i Everybody in Wasl gton exeited themselves to enteTW. be duke wlien he was here officia u ' va s left to Miss Elkins to tenstuke •i nt „,^Bfor you." she Let me an somej^g • snid. chatting one e “I’ll give you a dip - * dance oi a theater partv.” Xl, "I'll take them answered the duke promptly. 1 \ So, one day, mar.yT^ triends of Miss Elkins receiverO^ t 0 a d ' nnet in honor of the d‘'■* ^ruzzi. After the dinnei ■?, Elkinß an ' nounced that the attend the theater, and off t ? we,e w ’ ,ed 111 autos. After the^ heater the entl,e party was whi Z zeC» ? Rancher's, the Sherrv’s ot l ashin S to «- wk ere Miss Elkins hadf lted a party for dancing. ■ To hisamazeml^J^ joyed a dinner. F , theater and a dance all in one ? ening But that is noth n ? V J? 1 ' MISS Elkins. She has had her OWQ wav. She Is the lly dau K hter senator bv his ^ nd Shß is a girl of briliar “‘ndality and pronomi‘ d W,U power If, by a rare c Bhe ^°” id be caned on to grac " a S ton knows she w a ld do d weU b

charming are some of the effigies over the tombs. Th» local name for the vault is “the ptace of the little angels," and though many of the princes who lie here were not at all angelic in their lives the impression left by the white marble wings of the statues is one of spotless purity. One unfortunate Spanish king, Don Jaim* 11. of Aragon, is daily on view in the cathedral of Palma, in Majorca. The sacristan of the place takes you to a yellow marble monument in the choir, opens a cupboard, and pulls out a very ordinary coffin with a glass lid. As poor Don Jaime died in the fourteenth century, he is not. now at all a lively spectacle. His mummy is made gay, however, with imitation royal robes—cottony ermine, and so forth. And They Usually Fail. Too many young people depend on their fathers money taking them through this world, and their mother’s prayers making everything right in the next. —Atchison Globe

SHIN US BUT I TWO SONS OF A GROCER MISTAKEN FOR HOUSEBREAKERS. TRAGEDY iN COLUMBUS, O. Young Men, It Is Said, Fired on Two Policemen in Error, and Are Shot to Death—One of the Officers Suspended. Columbus. O. — Mistaken for I burglars, John and William D. Frank, sons of R. O. Frank, an East side grocer, were shot and killed early Sunday morning by City Patrolmen Heinz and Casey. The latter has | been suspended pending an investiga- ; ' tion. but the former remains on duty, i Shortly before the shooting burglars | i were discovered by neighbors in the I grocery of R. O. Frank, at 1221 Parsons avenue. Both the owner of the store and the police were notified i about the same time of the burglary. | ' The two young men who were later ■ ■ shot, another brother, Albert Frank, | 1 j and William Yoerger. hastily armed ; themselves and ran to the grocery. ’ I Patrolmen Heinz and Casey, who were already on the scene, were watching [ j in the shadows of the building when 1 | the party came up and each mistook • j the other for the burglars. According to the statement of Yoer- j ; ger, W. D. Frank, who carried a small , 1 i rifle, raised it and fired four times at j I Patrolman Heinz, who then drew his ; ■ I revolver and shot and fatally wounded ! the young man. Patrolman Casey j 1 ' ordered John and Albert Frank to ; throw up their hands and the latter 1 ' ' says they did so and that the shoot--1 I ing of John Frank was unjustifiable, i Patrolman Casey declares that John ' didn't throw up his hands, but instead drew a revolver and had aimed it at j him when he tired. Both the voting t* I I men lived several hours after they were shot.

e SENDS FLEET TO AWE SULTAN. Italy to Make Naval Demonstration in Turkish Waters.

Rome —An Italian squadron, under command of Admiral F. Grenet. has set out for the purpose of making a demonstration in Turkish waters. The squadron comprises 10 warships, carrying 7,000 men. The difficulty between the two nations arises out of the refusal of the Turkish government to permit the in- । stallation of Italian post offices in Turkish territory, though they are maintained by other nations. BRUTAL CRIME IN KANSAS. School Principal Beaten. Robbed and Thrown Under Train. Manhattan. Kan. W. W. TTiiU ijylncttvU of the Ugh t-chool "*■" well-known < ducator. was ; waylaid men. beaten into in- । sensibility. rohbeiUand uyowu ’.mder the wheels of a train tint—. 4-., uig±.t and was rescued after one leg had been cut off. The robbery occurred in the Union Pacific railroad yards, through which Prof. Hutton was passing on his way h mie. The ro!>bers escaped. INSANE MAN KILLS THREE. Is Then Himself Slain by a Colored Hotel Porter. Warrensburg. Mo. —F. O. Hawes. 22 years old, whii ; mipoi arily

insane. Sunday shot and killed Marshal James Ryan and Night Watchman Basbanhn. and mortally wounded Night Watchman R. P. Pollock. He I was shot and killed himself by a negro I porter for a local hotel. The shooting took place in the Missouri Pacific railroad station. Howes was the son of a Johnson county : farmer. BATTLESHIPS ARE SEPARATED. Fleet Divided Into Four Squadrons for One Week. Los Angeles, Cal. —Sunday night for ' the first time since leaving Hampton ! roads, the battleships of the Atlantic fleet were separated. In four harbors. I a few miles apart, they lie at anchor in divisions of four and these positions they will maintain until next Sunday morning, when the lo fighting craft, \ again united under the flag of Admiral Thomas, will get under way for Santa Barbara, the next port of welcome Alleged Kidnapers' Aid Taken. Wheatfield. Ind.—Everett Merrill. | wanted by Chicago authorities for be- , ing implicated in the Lillian Wullf kidI naping case, for which Kidnaper Jones ! and wife are now serving imprison- | ment, was arrested here Saturday. I Merrill was wanted on the charge of 1 attempting to collect ransom mouev. — In Memory of George Smith. Washington. — Memorial services I were conducted in the house of repre- , sentatives for the late Representative j George Smith of Illinois. Great Club of Sportsmen. St. Louis. —The Alamitos Hunting ! and Fishing club, composed of sportsmen from all over the country, is being organized in St. Louis, according to Norman J. Coleman, formerly lieuI tenant-governor of Missouri, who is i the president. Five hundred members ■ will make up the organization and each has pledged himself to subscribe $2,000 to pat for the tract of 260,000 acres of land composing the Hacienda Alamitos, a ranch 70 miles from the Mexican seaport of Tampico, on which the club has an option. Uncle Sam in Polar Congress. Washington.—The American govern- | ment is to participate in an interna- ; tional polar congress to be held next i month in Brussels. Herbert L. BridgI man of Brooklyn, N. Y., has be on dwg--1 nated as the American delega:.' Oska Bankers Ask Economy. Tokyo,—At a meeting of bankers at Osaka, at which the chief trade centers were represented, resolutions were adopted asking the government to ob serve greater economy in the consider 1 ' ation of financial measures.

I—^4 u J- J Man. imp । ilwi | It is just a little Journey from the cradle to the grave. fust a wink of time eternal, just one single ocean wave! I AU resistless turns the silent, never-rest- | ing wheel of 'Hine—- ( Human specks within its orbit, we are I whirling to its rhyme; I And the circles that we travel in the ; universal one. ! Are but flashes of the spindles to the I Great Oblivion! I j I In the infinite and boundless all-unnum- । bered year on year. Who shall know when we, transcendent. ‘ for a moment lingered here? Who but He who planned the cosmos i shall have knowledge when we . whirled. Just a flash of flying spindle, in the cir- I cles of the world? ! What shall justify our ego on our evan- 1 escent way, ! When we pause but to consider we are j atoms of » day? o o o Almost Time Now. "To loosen the chain of everyday existence. to leave the beaten path of ’ strenuosity, to stray for a time among the wild flowers, is tonic to every man : —soul and body!" droned Whitcomb, stretched full length upon the shore. ' And the ideal vacation 14 right here at Weichseibaum’s." broke in Spriggs, his feet in a hammock and his body ' recumbent on the sod. "The man who spends his vacation 'seeing things' lias not rested. There is nothing to see here, only the lake, the cottages, the lazy inhabitants and Weichselbaum who is always sleepy. They do say ; Weichselbaum lies comatose all wintei , that he may remain awake in summei

to call early fishermen!” "When I return to Chicago." inter runted Wilkinson. “I am afraid 1 wil not wake up! In my mind’s dreaming I will be out on the lake while th? j waves ‘swish, swish.' against the boai prow, lapping in remonstrating voi« against an intrusion on their mornins ! antics. While the fog dwells above tht j lake 1 toss my first frog into the water! : \^\ I ■' m ; z - >

The sun is slyly peeping over the horizon. The dew is wet upon the ver dured shore. Along the weeds I cast and reel. B-r-r-r!’ out goes the reel! ‘Click-click-click!' back it comes. Thyre is a quick j#rk, the pulsation in i the water, the moment of waiting when the line is running free. And I then the climax!” “Hear! Hear!" from Whitcomb. “How much does he weigh?" queried . Spriggs. The others grinned and the bittern screamed afresh. “But that is not all.” continued Wilkinson. ignoring the sallies. “The sun comes up apace, painting rainbows on । the glinting waters, the crests in red and gold and auriole, the troughs in shades of blue. From the farm homes i about the lake pastoral grunts and ' cock-a-doodle-dos are emanating. Away in the distance an early whistle blows, calling the brawn of the countryside to the threshing bee. The boarders are stirring for a fish break fast. From the dock comes the shrill cry. “ ‘Where do you hook frogs, pa?" and then a woman's voice: “ How do 1 know, Reginald, when I I have a bite? Oh, oh! I have one now! Oh. dear, no: it's only a weed'' ” o o o Teo Narrow. Bings and his wife were out automobiling. It was a beautiful morning : and the fragrance of spring was in [their nostrils as they bowled along. Suddenly. Mrs Bings could contain herself no longer! “Isn't it simply heavenly!” she ejaculated. “Not at all," replied Bings, swerving widely to make a turn in the crooked ! toad. “Why?" asks Mrs. Bings "Because the heavenly road is a I straight and narrow path." replied the I patera:’ 1 chauffeur | \ ctxWXkLV} His Accent. An American-born girl was boasting j of her English ancestry in public, ami said: "Grandpa has lived in this counI try over 40 years, but he's just as Engi iish in his accent as when he went to Oxford: for instance," she added, “he i still says horanges!”—Harper's Maga I zin -. Professional Superiority. The radical type of golf enthusiast i is exemplified in the retort of a St ■ Andrews caddie to the university proi fessor: “Onybody can teach a wheen loons Latin and Greek, but gowf, ye 1 see, gowf requires a held.

Cleanses the System EHectually; Dispels ( olds andlie a tier lies Juo to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts tas a Laxatix e. Best forMenV^men aniCkdA ren-y6uno and Old. do get its Beneficial Ejects Always buy the Genuine winch has ine full name of the ( out"CALIFORNIA Fi& Syrup Co. 1 by whom it is manufactured,printed on the front of every nackft^e. SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, one size only, regular price 50. pe-botl'e. .. ~ ..... , ..... A FORGOTTEN ROMANCE. 3TI “Do you remember. Jane, 20 years I ago. a moonlight night, when 1 whis | pered, tenderly: ‘Jennie. I love you,’ ; and you answered, passionately: ‘John you nose looks so funny and swollen IDo you suppose something's bit ten it?’” CURE AT CITY MISSION. Awful Case of Scabies—Body a Masi of Sores from Scratching—Her Tortures Yield to Cuticura.

“A young woman came to our city mission in a most awful condition physt । cally. Our doctor examined her an i told us that she had scabies (the itch, incipient paresis, rheumatism, etc brought on from exposure. Her poor body was a mass of sores from scratch iag and she was not able to retain solid food. We worked hard over her for seven weeks but we could see little improvement. One day I bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, and we bathed our patient well and gave her a full dose of the Resolvent. She slept better that night and the next day I got a box of Cuticura Ointment. In five weeks this young woman was able to look for a position, and she is now strong and well. Laura Jane Bates, 85 Fifth Ave., New Y., Mar. IL 1907.” ■— — Machine-Made Proposat Annabel —How queer! Here’s a story about a man who made a out of an attachment for a machine. Arthur (softly) — That’s nothing. , I’ve formed an attachment for the ' sweetest little sewing machine in the j world, and would consider my f rtun e made if she'd have me. (No carls Very True. I The Best Friend —I hear her oi l husband shows her a dog-like d? ’ I tion.

The Casual Gossip—Yes, they say he is always growling at her. it Cures While You Walk Allen’s Foot-Ease is a certain cure f t hot. sweating, callous, and swollen. ■ “a feet. Sold by all Druggists. Pi ice 25 D ■ t accept anv substitute. Trial p • : A ’ * Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, A- - effective work is the result of concentrated thought and perseverence. —Marden. I.ev. is’ • ’ ’ i pay 10c for cigar.' not o good. Your dealI er v Lewis’ Factory. Peoria. 111. Patient endurance attaineth to all things.—St. Teresa. Olrs. XVinglow’s Soothing; Syrup. For chtWren teething, softens the pur-.s. re -e, adaiaaiitxu.aiUt Spain, cures wind vo.ic. . ■ . Hope, without action, is a sad undoer. —Feltham. SICK HEADACHE [ _ . I Positively cared by ImRTUU: • mIO F I tress from Dyspepsia. la- \ Lligestiouaud Too Heart., 9V/ F R Eating. A perfect reraik a * r Nau- ® PILLS. jiea. Drowsines-s Bad I Taste in the Mouth, Coatled Tongue. Pain in the [Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely 'Stable SMALL P!LL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, r«An TC ne! Genuine Must Bear UAKltnu Fac-Simiie Signature Kittle I® PILLS. Refuse substitutes. D GARDEN '• - ■ __ —,with Plow. Sbeve:. Rake. I sod Wretch ail! L— inunhansaable. Weight 1H t!‘N\ pocads li^ht enoujh for a H V a u child. The best icipkaiect £ 8 s ’ or ’wk ’ c tanless. 8 * S Write for price and finely Ui Xa* - . W / lustrated pamghlet No. 37 ’ i PI3IJJ £ OREHDOHFF CO, CMTOH.TJWIS