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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 37

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
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Page:
37
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

wmmmmt 1 II i inn, i -a PART six: (GAZIN iv 11 i n1 ii ill JU TRADE MARX REGISTERE9 BARCM 27, 1906 may 20. ioog. anaorBram. Greatest Living Americans: NMl lorthe man who works vrtlih 'Bttrs. -2- Machines eave MagicSpell IV.

Grover By Hollis W. Field. Over Men Operating Them. ft i 1. 11 11 it II By Clyde amines.

nth machine have a personality? chines the manager sent him east tor a 1 4 i Why, sure." said the old linotype operator. You don't have to go to Rudyard Kipling to learn that. Take this old mill of mine, for I've been grinding slugs out of It thousands with only peucll noteeonascrap of paper for guidance? VTk teU Senator Ingalls who wit VrT that art lnU addresa. Master of speech himself and at enmity with 1', ntl, dignitarleo and a world diplomats to m.ko a speech ot fntTlnP8 confess that he looked on la dumb Wonderment a ii. instance.

i i i 1 1 to learn the mechanism. Chase! Him in His Sleep. I used to tinker around the machines all day and dream of them half the night," he says. Before I got accustomed to them they seemed like enemies. They would chase in through th night like wolves.

They would spurt flames and hot metal at me, as if they were dragons. They would come to pieces and fall on me. I have dreamed cf swallowing them. But after a few months they grew amiable. They treated me as if I was a friend and a brother.

But I will never get over the fascination they exert. It seems absurd to say these machines sre alive, but there are soni peculiar things about them. Each one has its Individual whims. You, have to understand them and humor them to good results." One operator tells a story about his It seems that one day when the "old man had an idle moment he sat down at the machine and began to spell out words on the keyboard, using a single finger. When he got th line fu he timidly snt it in.

Then he set up another line and another till his duties called him away. The next day he was back at the machine again fin i 5 i I- r- s- and we looked at each other and smiled. The old man did hot realise it. but we knew that he was falling under the spell of the machine. I As the days went by he would practice when- jj ever he could get a When he was busy at something else he would eye the ma- chine hungrily.

It was a pleasant thing to be i foreman, at course, but I could see that he i envied th rest of us who had nothing to dorfTjf Palm of tho president the scrap of visiting card upon which Cleveland had traced onlj thearest head, of that first inaugural ad- Courage Now Generally Admitted -Suppose his memory, had failed him? Bucn things happen to speakers skilled by a lifetime of experience, and why not to Cleve- lTt th ska Ingalls. Tet he stood there with all the confidence of a prophet of old, and without manuscript spoke for an hour to T0.000.000 of people!" If this were the courage which Ingalls saw In the man, the man's after actions, according to his personal convictions, are enough to lay that early challenge pointing to his hiring a substitute for the war whea the draft of 1863 laid hand upon this sole support of a widowed mother. Two brothers alread were at th front of war. Th draft legally was to be satisfied by one more able bodied soldier willin to carry a gun. Perhaps tt required some courage in the newly drafted assistant district attorney of Erie county, on his salary of $a0O a year, to ask to borrow the 300 necessary to secure that substitute 1 Substitute buying never was popular, even though the man who would sell his services to war were the better stop for a bullet than an energetic, hard working assistant to an invalid district attorney." Thls assistant's position always had been valued llttl for its salary and much for Its bearing upon the future law practice of th young attorney who might have the place.

Cleveland made the most of his opportunity and when, without his knowledge, he was nominated for sheriff of Erie county and against his protest was elected to the office, the young lawyer's nam was in- the sign of the law firm of Lanlng, Cleveland Fol- aom of Buffalo. He accepted the poet, however, and when in the course of his term of sheriff two deaths by hanging came to the office of the sheriff, that sheriff broke the law of custom, and, scorning the Substitute, with his own hand cut the rope which Bjrung the trap. Cares Nothing for Money. An expression credited to MrBisseU. a former law partner of Cleveland, is lug-Hestive of this sheriff: "I have often told i Cleveland ihat he had no right to accept the praises of She press and public for his in for fifteen years It was in the first battery of machines brought to Chicago and I know that I came under the magic of its spell the first hour I worked on It, and the witchery of the thing has never left me.

III not undertake to say whether it is endowed with a spirit of Intelligence of its own or whether it is merely the medium through which Cows a current of human thought, or even a more mysterious and subtle energy. But certainly it has life and individuality and a more than hypnotic power over the man who runs it. Moat Intricate Machine Made. We used to call it th impossible ma. chine.

For hundreds of years the dream ct a mechanical typesetter was thought to be as much ot a dreajn as perpetual motion or the transmutation of metals. Then Mergen-thaler oarae along and mad the machine. There is no particularly new principle in it, but it Is perhaps the most intricate lot of cogs and cams and wheels and arms and screws and springs ever assembled. It can do everything but talk, and I've often thought how easy it would be to put a phonograph on it to announce when the line was full or the metal pot empty. i Ton see the linotype is a formidable machine, and I think therein lies its fascination.

When you first sit down to one it seems as big as a locomotive. It dominates the man wh runs it. It looms up like a dragon. It threatens you, and you assail it in a sort of Here protest of seif-defeoae. We speak of a nervous operator as one who fights his machine.

Work at th linotype is absorbing. You must manipulate tn Keyboard, as in a typewriter. That is a little thing. But there ar a number of mental processes connected with the work keeping the copy in mind watching that your line is full, but sot too full listening for the matrices that may not fail seeing that th metal pot is full ana of the right temperature sensing 'unusual movements or inharmonious sounds and ail requires unequaled concentration. Complete Absorption of Operator.

"In consequence the operator is completely wrapped up in his work. He does not heed the flight of time nor the weariness of his muscles. He does not look at the clock. think I am safe in saying that there is not a lasy operator among the hundreds who work in Chicago. In some ot the big job.

offices they run a lobster shift from 1 till 7:30 in the The men work without a foreman, and they turn out as much work as though the ey of boss was upon them. Of what other" craft could such a statement be The linotype la so complicated 'that it requires the. constant care of a machinist other than the operator, though itf some small with but one or two machines man who is known as a machinist operator performs both functions. Frank Follet, who is said to have been the first linotype machinist in Chicago thougn It is a matter of dispute says the way the thing took possession of him was little Jess than demoniac When his paper put In ma- eROYEK CLEVELAND. th mot distinguished private citizen lath world." When Thomas H.

Carter, formerly a United State senator and titrrMB of the republican national introduced the former president of at United States at the dedicatory services the St. Louis world's fair his felicitous a-Mwtogy took with the people. There I I I 5 it id iv 4 A all day but pound that blessed keyuoaro. Bad as Actors to TalS Shop. Nobody ever hung around a girl as devotedly as th old man hung around the machine.

all knew what would happen. Bur enough, th old man decided that 1: would rather run a machine than boss the i bunch, and he Is now one of the raving given up his Job for th privilege of wo'le on the machine." It has been noticed that linotype men are worse than actors to talk shop. When two or' three of them are gathered together they do not speak of politics, or religion, or 1,000 license, or X. M. O.

They talk about the string they set the day before, the new swift at such a place, or the dub at such another place. But absorbing as undoubtedly bis occupa-: tion Is, the linotype man has his recompense. His work never bores him, and that is much these mechanical days. If be has too few interests, the complete enthrallnfent of his work prevents ennui. Now and then a new operator permits the Work to get on his and there are some men who cannot stand the strain, but as a rule th operators are heaithyand sane.

They keep their youth. as well as other workmen. The operators are among the best paid and most Intelligent of craftsmen. As an instance of their devotion to th trad it has been pointed out that, although they already had the short workday, they voted almost unanimously for the eight hour movement, and are now paying a 10 per cent assessment to help their brother printers in th book and Job trad carry on the fight. wre unmistakable grounds for the assertion, jtreonally and politically.

Gt Cleveland is the first and only demo rtt elected to the national presidency since it civil war. He is the only man of all the who, serving a first term, was delays it the following election and in a ifcri tanpaign was elected over the man had defeated him four years before, iit If preparatory to this distinction, he ti been the first democratic mayor of S.fela tad the first democratic governor of following the dark reign of civil is mayor, governor, and president, too, he hiiioctl against the common designation i a position in government by veto, uj to the pen with an iron hand in its of laws which- representative" l. framed and found good in their I Leader and Dictator. i hes paragraphs alone one may find Old Man Gives Advice to John; usiness Men Ss ing. Worst Trade in the Wdrld Is Wall Paper Color Mixer.

By William Giles. Hi! manager of a By CKa.rles N. Crewdson. a few grains of corn that fall through the cracks; the business i P- Us id f-fr ar in in re i- large wholesale hiuse sat in his had started to rustle for- jie fer a a Bund for the florid designation, The most private citisen In the world: lie Grover Cleveland individualism is related strongly enough In these preliminary itemetits of faet to suggest a man dis- 1 -lulshlog his office rather than taking his from it a leader and a dictator her than the mere executive in elective St. For it was the iron in the man which dde the mayor the governor and which ude the governor a twice elected president I greatest republic in the world.

And raocrat that he was and Is, it 1 S.lal actiors which pleased the fewest of party followers that Grover Cleveland's j' as a president finally may be found to 1 -it. Set Ecmocracy by the Ears. Aj president of the United States, ordering a.srj' troops Into Chicago on the occasion of at railroad riots of 1894, there was no i )-5 ior other than enmity in labor ranks. the Gov. Altgeld following of his own Illinois rose up In bitter protest.

a democratic president, calling an extra i mn of congress and folding it to the re-. 1 thi- purchasing clause in the Sherman I risked something to set the greater st of the democracy forever by the ears, i f-t (he enforced purchase of sliver bullion i ih government was stopped. in lato. when Great Britain seemed "rniaei ta push an aggressive claim for upon the republic of Veneauela, i wpping the boundary of Its acknowl- Pi British Guiana, the American public one morning to the specter of war as ia a ringing message of President reiterating the right of the States under the Monroe doctrine to I 'Mint an American commission to audit the I'Sa of the British government, "Iaa firm in my convictions that, while It thing to contemplate the two i 4t English speaking peoples of the world being other than friendly competitors In 1 orwar a march of civilization and strenu- aiad worthy rivals In the arts of peace, yet is ni greater calamity which a great 1 ,4 can Invite than that which follows a fte submission to wrong and injustice, and 'CBseaAient toss of self-respect and honor, 'h which are shielded and defended a fty and greatness." 5 3Jt Lri Salisbury's administration ac- i thn oCSces of the commission and in ct recognized at the hands of a former I rtt of Erie county, N. that primitive Ms ia the Monroe doctrine which umpte the lndttdual on occasion to demand ia his neighborhood at the risk of hav- lt figat for it, England's recognition of 4' American national principle must stand I i 5 a world recognition of it for all time.

i tt 1 Well, father, I don't know just exactly but I thought I'd like to take a post-graduate course and get a Ph. D. You see I have only a Ph. Ph. umph? Well, there's only one letter between and don't you think you've gone about far enough? As It is you can't read the one you have.

What's' the use of getting another?" Well, you see. father, the Ph. B. nowadays is "just sort of a starter, You must have the" Ph. D.

that Is, a doctor of philosophy degree the Ph'. B. is only a Bachelor of Philosophy degree before a college man will recognize you as having don 'anything." "College nothing. What do I care about what college men think of you? They aren't going to support you. Why, the poor beggars hardly, get enough to eat.

I've been out to receptions with night a couple of young professors got their hands against some fresh before they, came Into the house the reception was. When they took off their spiked tail coats and rolled up their sleeves, why confound it! although it was 22 degrees below zero, those fellows were wearing minnow seine under-. wear. I don't care what a. man who.

can't wear flannel next to his hide when snow is, on the ground thinks of you. I want you to have a stand-in with the substantial men of the country. Had Thirteen Years in School. "Now, I tell you, son you've spent eight years in the grade schools, four years in the high school, had a special tutor for another year to get you ready, and have put in four years in the university. Of course this is all right.

You aren't spoiled yet and if you- have your head set to it good and hard to take up a profession after a while, all well and good! But look ahere I am Just right now sending away yes, see these checks a hundred dol-ars each to two of your brothers. One of hem has been practicing law for four years tnd tr. WItherspooh has had his sign out ior over two years. They're both writing to tie old man to send them money to pay their louse rent. Th only ones I don't have to jut up for right along now are Ned, who took vp electricity, and Sam, that's a mining eugi-.

neer an neither one of them right now is making as much as. my 'average traveling silesman. Of course I say, if you want to become a professional man, that's" But I'll tell you, son, the lawyers and doctors get only man owns the crib, full of I've kind; of. got this professional man idea out of my head, I it good and hard when older brothers were growing up but if you want to do something of that kind, that's all well and good; but, do you know, I've kind of got It into my head that a business man Is a professional man. Why, my buyer here in the silk department must know a whole lot of things technical things too and 1 don't see why he's not just as much a professional manes the fellow that yanks a tooth out of your Why, my: traveling salesmen are professional men.

They have to study" their business. It has cost me a good deal of money to find out that the young fellow starting- out on th road a whole lot to learn. Vear in the University of Hustle. "Now, mayb you would like to take up a profession that none of your brothers has stooped to- and become a professional man. Of course, say if you wish to do any on of 'these other things and don't agree with me, you shall have -that 1'H spend a thousand a year on you for four years But before you do that I'm going to have my say for Just a little while.

I want you to spend at least one year in the' school that I've been going to for half a century. I want you to put in a little study in my college the University of Hustle. It seems to me that this so-called higher which la little more or less than reading of good books, should be the pleasure picked up In leisure hours of the business man. Why, I've seen one of my friends here in Chicago get into a talk with a lot 'of professors on subjects of history, religion, philosophy, and literature and nearly skin them in an argument; and I'm shot if I don't believe" that he has a better as you call it, than any professor I ever met. And yon know that your old dad himself Isn't such a slouch when It comes to" books eh, son? But, here! This is Monday morning and two days' mail to go through; You run along out now and see your mother.

You can take on day's vacation with her, but tomorrow morning you show up here with me at 8 o'clock. One ot my traveling men has Just told me that the young man who packs his trunks has got wise and is going to go out on the road on. his' own hook for another house. He needs a good, live boy to help him along, and I guess I'll just turn you over to him for a few trlpa" (Copyright: 1906:. by Joseph.

B. Bowles-1 corruptibility in office, for there is no such credit "due a man who cares nothing for money." That this carelessness of money, was a trait la the man is attested toy an 1o- cident which, cam about whea Cleveland had taken again to an. independent law practice. k-- i A first client was a widow, with a mortgage of due on her home and not even the money in her possession with which to pay an attorney for an opinion, regretful of the fact that nothing In law could be done for the condition. But outside, the law and without fee.

Attorney Cleveland that afternoon drew from his private bank account and dispatched a messenger with it to the holder of the note, lifting the mortgage, perhaps not even in the name of the husband of the widow and the father of the fatherless." It was an act to prepare one for the. expression of a leading Manhattan lawyer a few years later, when, after meeting Cleve-sJ land, he referred to him as the strongest man I ever knew who had not a national reputation." Life as Private Citizen. With his retirement from the presidency at the close of his second term of office. Mr. Cleveland chose the life of the private citi-aen.

His home at Princeton, N. is characteristic of his tastes for private life, while as a trustee of the university and occasional lecturer on economics he shows his individual not to bury wholly his personality. His acceptance of a position in the untangling of the Equitable insurance muddle of a few months ago attests that he has a heart still for community problems, hile his magaalne writings and occasional speechmaklngs awaken public interest to a degree which shows that the world has a waiting ear for the expression of the Grover Cleveland point of view on almost any topic of his choice. Today there Is scarcely a personage In thei country whose public utterances of whatever kind are so certain of display headlines in the newspapers of the next day. i As evidence of this may betaken two articles written, a few months ago on the general subject of woman suffrage.

On who has not read or heard of these articles may guess the tenor of them. The result of the first article was a storm of protest from the women advocates of the unrestricted ballot, while the second article ostensibly for th purpose of answering the criticisms of the first served admirably as the part of a rubbing it in process. Incidentally, too, in violation of the conceded truism of the man and th woman controversy, it left the man with th last word." Most Approachable of Men. The Princeton home of "the most distinguished private citizen in the world has been described as wide open in the full sense of the word. Its master is one.

of the most approachable of men at home or in the streets of the university town, while in local affairs, even to local politics, he takes the liveliest interest. In the life of the community Mrs. Cleveland take even a more active Interest and part, carrying" with her all the old charm of tact and manner that distinguished her in Washington life. On March 18. 1907.

Grover Cleveland will be 70 years old. Mor than a. generation cf this period will have been spent In the public eye as few men have experienced that gase. He has his critics and his enemies. Most of these have been partisan at one time or another, and the partisan spirit in politics has been shaded and softened greatly in the last decade.

Some of the unreconstructed ones have passed on into the great shadow. At the close of his presidential term he had been called th leader without a party. As-sa- Its that were unlooked for may have etung deeper than fac or front bore witness to but in that last paragraph of his last message congress may read something cf his reconciled philosophy: When our differences are forgotten and our contests of political opinion are no longer i remembered nothing; in the retrospect of our publio service will be as fortunate and as comforting as the recollection of official duty I well performed and the memory of a constant devotion to the interests of our ellow-countryaien." hmself at the age of 12 in a little country stoie. By hard Work he had made himself heading head of. a large wholesale firm and helt in the vault a big slice of the company's Sock, juicy in dividends.

When le had to quit school and go to work he was jist beginning the third part of arithmetic ant a simple volum of United States history. He would have had a much larger slice of tie firm's stock had he not been a disbeliever In race suicide and had he not felt that all of his seven sons should have a university education and training for some profession. As the old man read his mall, his youngest son, John, who only that morning had returned from nine months at the university, came into the office. The old man was fond of his children, and especially loved his youngest son. Although a man of business, the veteran was genial in his makeup; he was democratic; he felt himself as good as a Supreme court Judge and no better than the elevator boy.

John was togged in the latest fashion on each foot a shoe the shape halt a yacht, trousers freshly creased and railed up at the bottom, straw hat, the band ot Which emblazoned his Greek letter; fraternity. colors. In one of his gloved bands he carried a walking stick In the other his PnB. degree he had Just got at Harvard. The old man was eo glad to see John that he hugged him waen be came into the office.

Well: you've got your degree, John? yes, father. Here is is. I'll show Jt to you." Rolled SheepsKin on the DesK. John took an initial sllvercigaret'case out of his pocket, lit a coffin nail with a wax match, and elipplng the bow knot of th blue ribbon tied around his degree, rolled his sheepskin out upon the oldman'sdesk. H'm, h'm you finally got it, John.

Read it to me." John began mumbling over the Latin word on his Ph. B. degree, coming soon to his own name, Joanhis Carolianus Wltherspoon." "Oh hold on there with that stuff, John, this Joannis Carolianus businecS; give me the John-Charley of it! -1 want you to talk to your old dad in the straight America language. I don't know, anything about that stuff." Then Joannis began to stammer over lis translation of his Latin sheepskin. He nado such a botched Job of it that the old can, soon blurted out.

Well, never mind what it is just so ong as you've got it." Then, like a business nan. having brought one deal to a head, thfold man started in on another and turne to Joannis with-the remark: Well, now look here, John; you area tan now. You are 21 years oldand have this (ere degree, what are you going- to do WelU after I have my vacation, father-" Life Had Been One Long Vacation Vacation, You haven't had aty-thing but vacation since you were born, ad you haven't given a vacation to yaur metier and me since I used to walk yoi nightsto keep you from howling. Now you've ben through school and got what yoa wantet-you know I was kind of half a mind not give you this last four years anyhow nor what are yougolng to do?" POSSIBLY it wouldn't be the worst trade in the world if th matters of hours, salary, and chances for employment wer to be considered as offsetting the things that go to make an occupation unpleasant. The pay sometimes runs as high as $100 a week.

The hours run on an average eight and' on-half a day. Th trade is so far from overcrowded that every competent jnan in it is known to practically every employer In the country." Every man in it Is so sure of work. It he stays in th localities Vwhere his trad is of use, that life is to him one grand, sweet song of employers trying to hire him from each other. The demand always exceeds the supply. And employers treat their men as considerately as they do customers.

i BUT it Is the worst trade in the world, Just the same. The favorable things mentioned do not compensate for the unfavorable features of the work. Th economic conditions of the workers in It as a class may properly be considered as near to the Ideal as this mundari sphere offers to any wage earners. But the actual work that the men engaged in this trad do Is so dirty, so foul, so unwholesome, and so generally repulsive to the normal human being that it merits the title that knowing ones bestow upon It: The worst in the world. Th trad is that of th wall paper color mixer.

Workers in inks, ink compositions, paints, leads, and colors of any kind are "up against it in the matter of having unpleasant world'- Makes Beauty from Foul Things. For some strange reason or other it has been decreed In the alchemy of nature that the pretty things of the world muse spring In the beginning from the foul. The brightest colors come from the moet deadly and most loathsom compositions of chemicals, etc. The fairest shade of ink or paint material was once In the foulest form of protoplasm. Th men who handle these things in their original form hav work that is worse than unpleasant Color grinders, paint mixers, snd inkmak-era work hard and die quick.

But the men who mix the colors that go to make Ink for printing wall paper work much harder and die much quicker than any of theseunless they quit their trade. They have without question the 'foulest skilled work In the world. and they admit It and curs because it is so. Combines Foulness of Foulest Trades. The man who cleans catch basins has a dirty sort of calling in life.

The man who scrapes th inside of a gas tank after th gas has been emptied therefrom has duties that are extremely sickening to the stomach. Th man who superintends the boiling of waste greases in a soap or grease factory has a line of work that nauseates with every breath of its foul odors. But the wallpaper color mixer has the unfavorable features of alt three of these trades Incorporated In his work, and many, many others besides. The work of the color mixer is obviously to mix colors. The colors that he must mix come to him in many different ways.

There are dry colors, wet colors, and there are other -ingredients. It is the other Ingredients that count. Their names sre- legion, and their smell ar "fiexce." They, coma -in liquid form, mainly, and they must be handled by hand to Insure proper mixing. The mixer usually works in the basement of a factory. This ia because the boiler room is there, and heat is a paramount factor In the work of preparing the coarse inks of wall paper making for the presses.

The work of mixing all is done In a room where the temperature is more like the oven of a bakery than one in which the average person of cane idea In regard to beat would be pleased to work. Vats, tables, mills, caldrons, and equipments of many kfruls are at Th floor usually is covered to th depth of an Inch with colors a vatiegated as Joseph's coat ever dreamed of being, drippings from the vats, caldrons, and mills. Clothes Discarded When Worn Starts. Coming to work the mixer, if be be at all careful, concerning his person, removes his outer' and under clothing and enters his working clothes, which are In the main composed of a pair ot overalls. It he place style above comfort he will nnlcally include ad undershirt in his wearing apparel' for the day's work.

But most mixers are not finical. fcttll. there is one advantage In the shirt proposition, it is easier to peel off an ink bespattered undershirt than to bathe the" upper pert of the body. But the sleeves la the shirt are strictly untenable. It Is Impossible to drive a sleeve covered arm Into a slimy, sticky mass of colored Ink and knead and handle It with as much facility as Is accorded by the naked limb.

From the time the work Is started in the the work of the mixer is one constant revel in the kind of endeavor at which the foregoing has slightly hinted. stirs smoky, smelly compositions with his bar rands, bends over vats full ot concoctions of decomposed animal and vegetable matter that stink higher than any Pittsburg divorce scandal, and for hour after hour breathes in air that Is polluted beyond the wildest dreams ot even a professional magaslne ex-poser. At night he goes out as the whistle blows with a face that Is nearer the color of rank, sickly sea weed thsn a healthy physiognomy, and his hands and wrists are Steeped through the skin In a combination of red, green, yellow, black, blue, etc. If he happens to lay off from work fora few weeks he gets this worn off. It takes longer to take the green out of bis face.

Pay High, but ft Is Earned. For doing this he is paid from 20 a week to 1 100. ranging according to his ability as a handler of colors and as a producer. A head color mixer seldom receives less than S50 a week. He earns his salary.

He helps make or break a Arm's business. He is an artist in his way. although) he would probably curse scornfully If this were intimated to him. He is paid for what he knows, the men under him for what they do. It does no: require any particular talent to learn to do what they do.

Almost anybody can learn It In cor.sNerably leva time than is required to master the ordinary trade, if he gets the chance to try t. When It is learned a man practically Is sure of steady work, and he should earn $30 a week whenever works. Most color mixers don't work alt the time. Ton got to go out and forget it once In a while, Is one motto that the guild swears ty. ISven the distinction of belonging to the worst trade In ih world palls on mankind.

itig of duck shooting, who could seek out 1 aspects of the sport for a i keenly interested as waa the 5 world interested ia the possibility of 'raatloaal war: Speech from Notes. fsidents are made, however, and for an W'Sftte term not longer than eight years ir.y Which may account wondering ones for th President t'n "'iPPing away from Washington ores of state In order that the spirit Jfer Cleveland might be renewed and 14 KtJn in he chill shadow of a duck Contents of Worker's Magazine, May 20. 1906. Greatest Xiringr Americans: Grover Cleveland, Citizeni.H. Field Old Man Gives Advice to John Says Business Ilan Ia Sins C.

2T. Crewdson. Machines Weave Magic Spell Over "Msn Cperatlng Them Clyde Haines "Worst Trade in World Is Wall Paper Ctjljv lliscr Giles Men Win Big Promotions iv. tf five rs Uailways. Warren Honest Work Win Succiei jr; MEny Chances.

lie Gallienne Small Eetailer? Makes i C. Fowler Jr. "Pie. unaffected horse "sfnee in tho of Grover Cleveland scarce- Clarke Girl Makes Hats of Chiffon at Oi .33 Dozen. I disputed by his bitterest enemies.

1 for him in the artificial limelight As president. ven his menu Men Who Answer Questions of Xauri Get Good Pay. L. Graft Lesson in Life of Tiffany; See Chance and Seize It M. Atwater Rouge et Ifoir.

.0. Henry Cutting Corners on Clonk Business Man's New System. Weaver Bookkeeper for Sixty Years Tells Methods of Old Days. J. L.

Graff Few. Men Make Billiard Balls 1 G. C. Britner l- vifC3 the. famous innocuous desue- if oi nis messages, xjui nunc I has another man, voted into the I acj maaft h- inaugural speech to.

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