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The Farmer and Mechanic from Raleigh, North Carolina • Page 4

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Raleigh, North Carolina
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4
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THE FARMER AND MECIIANI TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1M-0. NATION'S GROWTH DEFEIICE OF JEWS SHOWN BY CENSUS Ifect missionaries sent from this conn- counts of depositors to fit the deduc- I try ami demand indemnity for the tions he had male previously aud- this losses of life ami property at the. mis- made the total tally with the cask on I sion stations durincr the Doer uprising-, hand. After the bank examiner had flict, either on the rM, rw federate Dr.

Pell speak? of life of the Jew, nowhere is he a is In every calling he mate, the author says (Continued from page three.) sua all of them have been promoted fAA rw rtasfr. and five new candi In sharp contrast to these senti- pone he changed the figures again and ment are the views on the missionary having escaped the examiner was question expressed in a notable article again safe from detection by the bank 1 officials. by Rev. Dr. Henry S.

Nash, of the L.pis- ThuR month af1er month he follow-eopal theological school at Cambridge, tnjs svstem successfully until he dates have been admitted to the 200.000 lass Cleveland. Buffalo. San Francisco, iiuiiiij uiu jew argument, in behalf race. "In spit? ()f rii; Tyranny and disj er-i exterminate him. Egypt made his lived; the CrusaI rs calamities, but crushed him, but A WEEKLY NON-PARTISAN PAPER FOR THE IJOME, FARU, SCHOOL.

FACTOOT AND FIRESIDE. AT RALEIGn. N. a Communication! on Agricultural Topic, and Qucttiooa Relating to Labor and Education In tited. Addrrta all communication to THE FARMER AND WECHAMC, EaleJfh.

N. a Cincinnati and Pittsburg. Twenty yeais ago only twenty cities in the United Slates had more than 10,000 in The Churchman, on 'The danger of had not only stolen the banks entire BY REV. DR. PELL Why Does the World Hate Therr so Cordially i IS IT LOVE OF.

MOiNEY? The Failing is tfatural One With This People. capital, but tne surplus oesiues. An! all to satisfy the desire of a bad woman for dress and display. population, as follows: New York. Cleveland.

Chicago. Washington. Brooklyn Cincinnati: Philadelphia. Louisville. St.

Louis. Milwaukee. modern missions." Dr. is bold and outspoken. He asserts that in the case of many Christian missions "the flag has stolen a march on the cross." It Ls his opinion that in its purity the missionary mo Jersey City.

Newark. New Orleans San Francisc Detroit. Pittsburg. THE NEW PRESIDENT OF THE A FIGHT IN NORTH Pax AY Boston. TUESDAY October 1C.

1900. Dr. Venable's inaugural address to Baltimore. Providence. tive must not be mixed up with "the Vol: Tagalogs Attack American Are Roughly Us The census of 1850 added Minneapolis, flag." lie argues mat Jesus took re- the students of the University, deliv- ed.

St. Paul. Indianapolis, Rochester, Oma a (By the Asso ia ha, Allegheny. Kansas City and Denver ligion out of politics, and adds: ered last Friday evening, is printed in rf-o. tho fotr took all natns full in our news columns today.

It is ONLY AVENUE BY WHICH THEY CAN RISE to the list, and the present census adds Toledo, Columbus, Worcester, Syracuse, New Haven, Paterson, Fall River, St. Joseph, Los Angeles and Scranton. J- Manila. Oct. 13.

Iloilo, Island of Panav. day, October 12th. sav of the Twenty-sixth teer Infantry, was atta. ous day by a force of T.u The enemy, twenty men killed an while the Americans ha ed. Twenty-two risen, rifles and a quantity of captured.

The TagalK Island of Luzon. There are now forty-five States in the Union, but only twenty-one of their capital cities have a population of 25,000, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Delaware, North Carolina, South Carolina, Mississippi, Kentucky, West Virginia, Florida, South Dakota, North Dakota, Nevada. Oregon. Washington, Missouri, Wisconsin, Michigan, Maryland and several others falling short. A i to make clear the meaning of his death.

-worthy of a careful perusal, not only "Put up thy sword." he said to the by alumni of tne Universit, but by Anostle Peter, through -whose veins the ia i i otort of the Galilean peasant and patriot every citizen of the State. Dr. enable ran hot. And he did not forget In his own has Jhe right idea of the charge over agony and distress he did not forget to which he has been called to preside, touch and heal the ear that Peter's clum- Th(J Universlty of a State, when it truly sy sword had wounded. He would not its dutyt should be its chief permit the spotless purity of the cross to strcngth and gioryt a nght for the people, be so much as touched by the finger tips thg fountaIn.head of their life, the source of force.

Our Lord. then, bids us see to Qf their upllrting and upbuilding, the bul-it that In Oie missionary field the cross wafk of their liberUes be kept far from the sword. In his own temptation he gloriously withstood the Dr. enable has taken up the pressure put upon him by the Messianic great work lard upon him by trustees Ideal of his people. He refused to Caesar- 0f the University in such manner as lze himself In the slightest degree.

The fQ imlicate tnat his administration of church, imitating his life, comes from Ume to time under the same temptation ts affairs will be a most successful which he met -and overcame, and her and progressive one. sword to herself aitould be, "Look to it' That ho means to keep the Univer- Why Governor Vnce Once Pardoned a JevV That Was in the North Carolina Penitentiary. Their Beautiful Home Life. RIchmod, October 12. In Dr.

Edward Leigh Pell's new book, "The Bright Side of published during the past week, there is a notable chapter on the Jews, in which the author says that while the Jew has had a place in the world's consciousness since Abraham's day, it is only within the memory of men-now living that he has begun to find a place in the world's conscience. Speaking of thej age-long prejudice against the Jew, Dr. Pell says that it Is a little remarkable that very few specific charges have ever; been brought against him. "Nobody, has accused him of being TWENTY-FOURTH VOLUMR. With this issue the Farmer and Me-clvaniu enters upon its twenty-fourth volume.

Founded by Randolph Shot-well, later edited by Walter II. Page, and at all times laboring for the development of the agricultural and industrial interests of the State, its nearly a quarter of a sent rj of service has been one tliat it can look back upon with pride. The Farmer and is now enjoying a popularity and a degree of prosjjerity never lx'fore. attained, showing that its eiTorts have not been unappreciated. SOME FACTS ABOUT TRUSTS.

Mark Hanna declared that there were not trusts. Senator Sewell, of New Jersey; Frye, of Maine, and others took up the chorus "No trusts they are, like imperialism, a bugaboo." As the late Mr. Sherlock Holmes would say, "Let's see." Are there or are there not huge combinations that New Bank at Lexington. (Special to News an! Lexington, X. n.t.

bank here will be 1st. It will be known as 1 tional Bank of Lexington. A 1 The population division of the census office is now working upon the States and has concluded the return only of Arkansas, showing an increase of 16.85 in population; New Hampshire, 9.3 per cent; Delaware, 9.6, and the District of Columbia, 20.9 per cent. None of these offers a fair basis for estimating the population of the country. WILLIAM E.

CURTIS. that thou be not Caesarized." 1 sity to the forefront in the educational MM a inn a i 4 last' night with J. IT. Lee Crissman as Frank Ausband as secretary. work of the State is plainly intimated in his bold declaration concerning the educational revival brought about by the result of the recent political campaign in North Carolina.

Of the adop Jilt; lltliAMiliU Nash, should go forth as an Englishman, a German or an American, and missionaries should never appeal from the cross to the flag for protection. To his mind it is humiliating that in LADIES FU HTENEO tion of the amendment, he says: THE CHARGE FALSE Chairman Jones Not Connected With Any Trust. China today British missionaries hover Diveste1 of an political color and under the British flag, American mis- bearing, it marks one of the greatest sionaries under ine American flag and steps forward ever taken by the poo-German missionaries under the Ger-' pie, virtually the enforced education of BY A CRIME 111 A 1. have destroyed competition, driven out! man flag. Rrvnn RnHH nf riiirhnm -k.

a i 'w ui i i ii i i i Their only flag, is the cross. To demand of the State that it shall protect them by force of arms is to degrade and abase the missionary motive and to rob missionary efforts of their chief glory. Then the writer turns the other side of business many firms and their own extortionate prices which the public have been compelled to pay, thrown thousands of workers out of employment by shutting down large manufacturing plants and fixed Tested Here Yesterday. every citizen. it maives more scnxi and better; improvement in all lines of education from the smallest school in the far-off country district to this University, the head of the educational system of the State.

The address shows that Dr. Venable realizes that the University belongs to the people; that it was created to serve them, and that he means to keep it true to that mission. a disturber of the peace; nobody ever called him a loafer sot, or a quarrelsome fellow; nobody ever wrote him down in the criminal class; nobody has accused him of a lack of benevolence. We have been content) to hate him for what he is, perhaps, rather than for anything that he has done. no; this sentence will not pass.

There is one thing for which we hate him, and that is his inordinate love of money. Yet, when wo come to examine aur hearts, on this matter we are hot sure whether it is his lovo of money that is so exasperating, or the fact that he is -constantly getting in the way of our, love of money. I am not sura but that this, after all, is the' secret of the world's age-long prejudice against the Jew. From. Jacob's day, wherever the Israelite has gone he has made money faster than his neighbors, and for this he has never been forgiven.

As for the modern Jew's love of money, it is a most natural failing. As a famous Anglo-Jewish physician once said: It should not be forgotten that all other means of distinction have been denied the-Jew. He must rise by wealth or not rise at all, and if, as ho well knows, ''to insure wealth be to insure rank, respect and attention in rf Vn TirtiiT0 rvrwl crrrC5 mitif in his He Says if Roosevdt Had Wanted to Inform Himself, He Had Every Opportunity of Doing So. (By the Associated Press.) Chicago, Oct. 13.

Chairman Jones those their own rate of wajres for observations: HE WAS CRAZY DRUNK of the Democratic National Committee, re The climax of tragic inconsistency Is achieved when It is seriously asserted that the American, forces should not leave China until assurance is given that the converts of American missionaries shall be protected. In this case the flag not nnlv fitunla mnrrh on th rross but Me Attempted to lDiure Lad its With There seems to be a widespread interest in the formation of the project- a large Knife. ed State Literary and Historical As- HE IS 17 YEARS OLD AND WELL DRESSED He Commenced His Antics Yesterday ve practically captures it. 'Blood of the relation. Enough interest to secure martyrs Indeed.

A Chinaman converted the success of the first meeting to be by an American becomes In some sense an held in the Iianey Library Hall has al-American-an American by brevet! And manifested itself. This meeting, the flag must cover him! A short and i i- easy way of laying heroic foundations for we understand, will be the first public the future church in China. meeting to be held in this beautifully The editors of some of the religious 'decorated Music Hall. It is singular-weeklies are taking Dr. Nash sharply appropriate that an associate that has for its object the cultivation of the to task for these views, while certain ferring to Governor Roosevelt's associa? tlon of his name with "private ownership in trusts," said today: "Any statement made by anybody that I am in any way connected with or interested in any organization that is in any sense a trust is absolutely untrue.

The charge made that the American Cotton Bale company is a trust, was the occasion of a letter written by me, and published at the time, in which I stated the facts of my connection with that company. The letter explains everything jtnd was published and extensively circulated. If Mr. Roosevelt had wanted to inform himself, he had the opportunity of doingNso. If he is a sincere man, he will, not, after reading that letter, make the statement that the American Cotton Bale company they still retain in employment? In another column we today reprint from the Philadelphia limes some unanswerable proofs that there are such combinations and that they have multiplied as never before under the protecting arm of the present Republican administration.

The list contains only the names of the corporations with ten millions of-capital and upwards, chartered by the State of New Jersey alone since Mr. McKinley became President. The aggregate capitalization of this list of 123 corporations reaches the astonishing sum of $3,022,0:25,000, or more than three times the total national debt and twice the amount of gold, silver and paper currency in the country. Kvery voter should, in the interest of political truth and equity, give this tirticle a careful perusal and then decide for himself whetner Mark Manila's flippant assertion that "there are no trusts" is true. The list of New Jersey charters which are given in detail, with the date of incorporation and the authorized capital of each, astounding as it is in its total capital iniuiu unit uic biiiiii4mi)iy" 1 CKIIM lltVUIV UUU -lV- ghout tne fctate of the secular press are criticising the literary activity throuj mission boanl at St.

ixuiis for its en- i should be the initial user of this build us ing that is destined to do so much for 4 1 4-? nrv 1 i OTKlTlira 1 11 nil Pltv dorsement of McKinley's policy. The truth, as usual, probably lies oAmish and completeness of society, does the blame rest with him who endeavors to acquire wealth) for the distinction which it will purchase, or with that society which so readily bows down at. the shrine of. As this writer says, it is not pretended that the Jew Is a'miser, and that he desires to acquire wealth merely for the loathsome gratification of having it. 'The Jewish merchant is generally prof use.

in his expenditure; he has labored 6 gain riches on account of the respect which they will procure, for him, and he is proud of expending them with the same "Moreover, the Jew is liberal. Indeed, as Mr. Clemens has, said, his race is entitled to be called the most benevolent of all races of men. 'The Jewish beggar is not Impossible, perhaps; suclr a thing may exist, but there are few men that can say they have seen that spectacle. The is a trust.

However, there is an old adage that a lie well stuck to is good as the truth." B0WDIES ANNOY ROOSEVELT. somewhere between the two extremes. arrangement, no library building in Dr. Nash is perhaps too ideal, and the any other of our cities can equal the other follow a little too blood thirsty, i Olivia Iianey Library building. The -v- ill fact that a cenerous hearted citizen Dr.

Nash would have the missionary has built and equipped this ornate and go forth into a strange land without attractive house for the intellectual protection and without country. The uplifting of the city can but be an in-other view is that these preachers of spiration to every son 01 daughter of "peace on earth good will to men" State who attends this meeting to fo go home and work for the mental should call for war ships and marines of his own community and and demand that their home govern- mmmonwealth. Take Bryan's Name on Their Lips, Whereupon About five O'clock, ar.d,Kpt on Un- til Policemen a-id Thompson Him In. There is a youth of about summers, wearing a white Si. on his head and a dark brown his mouth, casting off a law.

against the walls of the ioliv This youth gives his name as -A or Bud Bryan. In his stnjior ist he could not make it clear whuh hails from Difrham and is- well On Monday he will have to a charge more serious than an "drunk and down." The cause to his arrest was his choosing girls, and apparently jure them with alarge knife thai ried. One of the young lali h- became so nervous that sle- trated and a physician had I rail. He began this performance 1 evening about 6 oclock, th- nor's Mansion, where he lady who clerks in a dry gocl.s on her way to supper. He but she escaped him by goin' in at a gate.

He did not seem how she got away from him. her and went toward several dren 'who were playing in a yar Jew has been staged in many uncompli ment collect indemnity by threat of ization, represents only a fraction of FORTUNE SWATS THEM ALL. mentary forms, but, so far as I know, no dramVitist has done him the injustice to stage him as a beggar. Whenever a Jew has real need to beg, his people save him from the necessity of doing it. The charitable institutions of the Jews-are sup the trust organizations cf the country, force from the Chinese government for every loss of life or property at mission stations.

ported by Jewish money, and amply. The Jews make no noise about it; It Is done quietly; they do not nag and pester and harass us for contributions; they give us peace, and set us an example an exam ple which we have not found ourselves able to Speaking of the Jew's law-abiding Roosevelt Calls Them Bryan's Friends. (By the Associated Press.) Louisville, Oct. 13. Louisville tonight gave Roosevelt ah enthusiastic reception, the program concluding with a crowded meeting at the auditorium.

This vas in contradistinction to the greeting offered at Elizabethtown, the last stop before the special reached this city. At that place, no sooner had the Governor mounted the platform with General Buck-ner and other members of his party than an attempt was made to break up the meeting. Small boys carried Bryan banners in outskirts of the crowd and empty coal wagons were driven at full speed through the square. The steam whistle on a mill close by was blown loudly and half a hundred men or more shouts ed, "Hurrah for Bryan," when the Governor began speaking. But above the shriek of the steam whistle rang the words: "I call your attention to the attitude of Mr.

Bryan's friends on the subject of. law and order." Then he waved his hand to the, crowd and continued: "It is. natural that the men who have tried to deprive Kentucky of a free ballot should be opposed to free speech. It is not extraordinary that the men who have stolen the Governorship and who seek to steal it again should not dare hear the truth of history, but should seek to gag an American citizen even before he had uttered one word of his opinions in a poli Declares Republicans Haven't Enough Money to Buy Him Ofi. (Special to News and Observer.) Winston-Salem, N.

Oct. 13. J. B. Fortune, the independent Republican candidate for Congress in this district, spoke here today.

He was severe in his denunciation of Congressman Linney, Spencer Blackburn, candidate for Congress, and Judge Purnell, of the Federal court. The. insurgent Republicans of this county endorse Fortune's candidacy, and have opened district headquarters here for him. They are sending out a vast amount of literature, including an address by Fortune, throughout the district, and are confident their man will get a good vote, which means the defeat of Blackburn. Fortune stated today that he was in this fight to the 'finish, and that the Republicans did not have money enough to buy him off.

in spirit, Dr. Pell says that a Hebrew is rarely found in prison, and recalls the statement of Governor Vance, of North Carolina, who, when pardoning the only Jew in the State penitentiary, wrote: "I His actions were so Strang" home. He then frightened M' ban's negro cook, and elia. A'" ladleaawhrtm mpt and all 1 I take pleasure In saying that I sign the pardon in part as a recognition of the good and law-abiding character of our Jewish this being the first seri ous case brought to my notice on the part of that people." In defendng the Jew again of the charee so often made that he is not, and in tne nature of things cannot be. a patriot Dr.

Tell quotes the Rev. Madison C. Pe Delaware, West Virginia, California and other States with easy corporation laws are turning out new trust charters almost daily and the entire trust capitalization of the country prolably aggregates ten billions "instead of the three and one-half billions shown oy the New Jersey charters issued since McKinley became President. The honest seeker for truth will find that not one of these vast combinations calls itself a trust, and therein lies the onby grain of truth in Han-na's statement. Hut what matters it to the man that is being mashed to death, whether it is a trip hammer or a compress that's doing it.

The result is the same These combinations may not be called trusts but their power of extortion is none the less great for that. The popular interest in the stupendous figures given lies in the hard fact that seventy-five millions of American people must, by hook or by crook, pay the dividends upon the enormous trust capital, and that a little handful of trust share-owners get the dividends. The trusts levy their rake off upon the food, drink, clothing, furniture, literature, education, recreation and religion of the masses of the people and Republican legislation and Republican officials and politicians help to make the extortion possible. Under such conditions it is hard to see how any man can hesitate as to how l.e will cast his ballot in the election next month. THE FIBST PAT'S REGISTRATION.

ters, who says in his "Justice to the that "until very recently the Jews THE BIGGEST THIEF ON EE COED. The New York papers are now printing story which shows conclusively that a thief in the employ of a bank is much more to be dreaded than the most expert cracksman on the outside. The case in point is the Schreiber robbery of the Elizabethport, (N. Hanking Company. Schreiber, a $75-a-month clerk, succeeded in stealing an amount equal not only to the bank's capital stock, but its surplus besides.

It may therefore be said, figuratively, that he stole the. whole bank, right under the eyes of those who were required by the law to keep a watch upon him. And it may be surmised that he would have stolen officials, directors, examiners, too, if they could have been handily converted into cash, for it appears that as a matter of fact, State Bank Examiner Stainsby made an investigation of the Elizabethport bank's affairs a few months ago, found everything satisfactory and complimented the officers upon the excellent showing. Nevertheless at that very moment Schreiber had already stolen pretty nearly as much as the bank's capital stock. Schreiber's methods were shrewd, but simple.

On calling off the deposit slips for entry into one ledger he would call off a lesser amount than was on the slip. If a slip read $2,100 he would read $100 and it would be so entered. He always deducted even sums so that he could easily remember them. The amount deducted he stole from the vaults or. from" the teller's tical controversy." were rarely ever permitted the opportunity of fighting for their but whenever they have been allowed to enter the lists they have proved that the contumely heaped upon them had nnt caped him by going im houses.

He next frightentd dents of the Baptist Femil. who were oh the campus in, fry-building, and ran them into in 1 then went down scared three ladies who had ping. By this time word had to the police station and h- by Officers Alderson and Th: mington street, near the He was taken to the poli" examined. A large foraii 1 knife, the blade to which i long, was found on. his jet 5 ed very much intoxicated.

influence of some drug, ai ,1 make himself was from Durham, and th enteen years old. Afier tipn he was locked up. upon a bench and almost asleep. At a late hour la-" not awoke and seemed to nary drunken sleep, ev i that his breath did not ha whiskey. He will receive a before Mayor Powell nex quenched their manhood." This brought chteers and more interruptions, but Roosevelt spoke the full fifteen minutes allotted to him.

"Just a put up job to break up theT meeting," was his comment when he returned to his car, "but I guess I got back at them." "It is well known." says Dr. Pell "hat during the Revolution a large proportion of the sinews of war were provided hv It is Much Heavier in Ifew York This Year Than in 1896. (By the Associated Press.) New York. Oct. 13.

The total of the figures of the first day's registration in Greater New York are as follows: Manhattan and the Bronx, 144.3G5; Borough of Brooklyn, Borough of Queens, Borough of Richmond, 4,757, making a grand total of 251,852. The above figures give an" increase in Manhattan and the Bronx and Brooklyn of 7.558 over the first day's registration of 1896. The figures la the other two boroughs for 1896 are not obtainable. patriot Jews. Hayne Solomon, of Phila- aeipnia gave six hundred thousand dol TEDDT IN THE ROLE OF JANUS.

lars lor this purpose, not one penny of which has ever been repaid to his heirs Benjamin Levy of Philadelphia and jamin Jacobs of New York were among o.eucis ol ine auis or Credit for the Continental Congress of 1776 whn. Oo uel Lyon of New York another patriotic AN INDEMNITY TO ITALY. Democratic Bally at Rocky President Will Recommend Its Payment for Mob's Victims at Tallulah. -uw, signea similar bills in 1779. Isaac Moses and Herman Levy, of Philadelphia, contributed large sums for the support of the army in the field.

A South Carolina Jew, Manuel Mordecia Noah, served as an officer on Washington's gave one hundred thousand dollars for the (By the Associated Press.) Washington, Oct. President will recommend to Congress the payment of an indemnity to the families of the four Italians who were the victims of a mob His War Face Behind Him, His Peace ce Smiles on Quakers. Greencastle, Oct. 12. Governor, Roosevelt speaking at Plainfield, today said: "I understand that this community is composed largely- of members of the Society of Friends who stand for social and industrial virtue in a way that entitles them to the respect of all peoples I am glad to address the members of the society that stood by President McKinf ley and gave their influence toward international arbitration at the peace conference at The Hague.

It is not possible as yet. for we have not advanced far enough to be able to setJtle all our difficulties peaceably, by arbitration, but in every case we should avoid an appeal to arms where possible. We believe in being slow to enter upon war, but having entered upon it we believe in carrying it through. We believe we have a right Ve la an unpublished (Special to News ai 1 Rocky Mount. N.

Beckwith, district elector, W. At water spoke here la-opera' house to a large audience. Both speech v. plane, and were li speaking was under the Bryan-Kitchin-Pou Hon. E.

W. Toil, can li 1 it will, speak here next V. the 17th instant. Ul jareo sparks the story is told that at the. outbreak.

P.W drawer to which he had access Hy at Tallaluh, Louisiana, about two years Mr. CWz, a Jew of New York ci company of soldiers A report from a special agent of this system the ereneral ledirer and the ao cash on hand always tallied, but 4he THE MISSIONARY HI POLITICS During the past week there has been much discussion of the missionary phase of the international problem in China. Public attention has been particularly directed to this question by addresses before the annual meeting of the American Hoard of Foreign of the Congregational church tfow in session at St. Louis. usucu lue iaci, iuai me were Kiiieu depositors ledger totals, of course, by the mob and that none of the perpe-differed.

His method of pulling the trators of the crime was ever punished wool over the "eyes of the examiner by the State authorities, notwithstanding was similar. Yhen the examiner came1 the "presentations of the National Gov-. eminent. The Governor- of Louisiana he counted the cash in the morning caused an investigation to be made and The Main at Newport Se8' tai A member of the Continen tal Congress to whom he unfolded his ahisraS.OR,Strd Wlth him of his age, he being then sixty-eight but ov V60117 rCplied that ana went his way. As Mr.

Peters savs the part which thvs took in te XT J6ff the StatS was conspicu! out thp IA WUld' dIfflcult to" pick out the most prominent men in the conl me; houses have wings, but they and took the securities to New York in there were some proceedings before theJto appeal to all lovers of peace to stand grand Jury, but the result was that the with us in the Philippines." the afternoon to have them proved, of the speeches In these meet Newport News, i German Lloyd Liner Mai safely at 5 o'clock this u- a disagreeable trip downj''1 Highwaymen ask too request their victims t0 hands and throw down i'u' Tho next day he returned and went National Government found Itself pound ing to make some sort of reparation 'Jn an Some men enjoy chronic laziness more than some others enjoy a well-earned rest. me oook. meamime swer to the ItalIan Government' repre- poiicy in China, calling' dn him to pro- Schreiber had erased the separate ac- sentations..

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Years Available:
1877-1915