Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 07, 1911, Image 2

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i fast as they.) As they started on the
+ | as. of the princes called to the
: hare: “Good-bye! And don’t forget to
rho bathe your wounds in the salt sea!’ And
LS eee = | with loud laughter they continued their
Bellefonte, Pa., A 7, 1911. | journey. . .
— : = = y 1 Title eA I Eye
| ti t e
AN APRIL WOOING. | {he waves roll over him, but Jn.
April's lady, you are fair, stead of making Ee ae :
Fair as fair can be. | “I must hurry to the Wind Goddess,’
April's sun is in your hair the poor hare t.
Apria shade i im your eves | “He climbed the high hill with difficulty
; and lay downon ng for
Deepest lakes of blue. I Ho i ot the stiff
Wears your heart the same disguise? pricked his glaring. and the
Is that April too? J i ID At
Pa lady, han. | last he realized that the cruel princes had
gc | deceived him, and he crawled back to his
April's self could not arrange | buch by the Teatside: where he lay with
Moods of more amaze. 1c eyes.
April's golden note one hears “A gentle voice roused him. ‘Who has
In your laughter gay. | wounded you, little hare? it asked. o.]
Why so sudden do your tears i “The little hare looked up and saw a
April showers essay? | beautiful youth standing him. His
experience with men made him think
April's lady, in your net that it would be best to fly from the
Iam helpless quite. > stranger; but the young man's kind
April days shall May forget glance conquered his fear, and he an-
Will this be my plight? swered: ‘I left the island of Oki to see
April gone your smiles will pass, the wonders of the mainland, and I have
Frowns be all the rule fared badly from the exchange.’ Then
Must I own myself, alas, he told once more how he had left the
But an April fool! island, and also about the bad advice the
=Fyancis Medhur!. princes had given him.
DE © me creatonne he said, '¥.
THE LITTLE HARE OF OKL | JOU 06 that it is foolish to meddle with
Alice lived in New York, but she still Ts Te To totment these
had the nurse who had taken care of her | weaker, My brother princes should have
when she was a tiny baby in far-away | told you to bathe in the fresh water of
Japan. Nurse wore the picturseque | the river and to lie on the soft rushes.
kimono and obi of her native land, Now, good-bye, little friend. May
looked sodifferent from other that | luck attend you! And he walked
feel at home with her. Love, however, is away, bending beneath the large burden
same Over, no onej hare knew the
at tome Li Ter 10% | wc Re Hitlers i aL i gle
Tone ga, ee a. 4 | Be CT oe Ba iri
4 t he was in suc!
aur, oo a id re had the li to go to the river, which flowed like a
all to themselves till bedtime, the little | giver ribbon through the fields toward
giz) Wonld often pull two chairs WP to the the ocean. Into the cool water he plung-
and say y. "w and immediately felt better, as the
“There is just time for a story!” And | gd and bitter salt of the sea were wash-
nurse would smile her funny Japanese | oq from his wounds. Then he took a
smile and begin nap on the soft rushes.
long ago, when the great Jap-| “When he awoke he no longer was in
anese gods ruled from pain, so he was filled with gratitude to-
This was the beginning Alice liked ward the young nce who had given
best, for it meant that a fairy tale would him such kind wise advice. He sat
follow. And nurse would perhaps con- |, feeling quite again, and tried
tinue: : 4 i to think of a way in which he could repay
'——a little hare lived on the island of | ig henefactor. In the distance he saw
Oki. It was a beautiful island, but the | the roofs of the princess's palace rising
hare was not satisfied; he wished to get| mong the trees which surrounded it.
to the mainland. He did not know how | This gave him an idea, and he lost no
to manage this; but one day he thought | ;i.6 in carrying it out.
of a plan. Hopping down to the shorehe |
3 “Across the fields he h toward the
waited till a ¢ ile came out to sun. apace never stopping till he the
himself, then opened a conversation with garden He t in under the high
him. | gate, and there the princess under
“ “There are, | suppose, many croc-
odiles in the sea,’ he began.
“‘Many many!’ the crocodile answer-
| a cherry tree covered with blossoms. The
| little hare went up to her and said re-
' spectfully:
es i | “‘Gracious Princess, I bring to you ad-
Not so many, however, as there are | yico if you will accept it from so in-
hares on the island of Oki,” returned the | significant a person as I.’
little hare. | ‘Speak, little hare,’ the beautiful prin-
* “The crocodiles in the sea out-number | cess answered, for she knew that the best
the hares of Oki as the drops in the sea things are often found in unexpected
out-number the trees of the island,” de- | places, and things are not always what
clared the crocodile, in his deepest voice. | they seem to be.
* ‘It does not seem right for a little bit | ‘Eighty princes are coming today as
of a creature like myself to differ with | suitors for your hand. They are
your lordship,” said the hare, politely, | in rich and beautiful robes, and their faces
‘but I should like to see a proof of your | are gay and smiling; but all that is only
statement.’ n | to hide the cruelty of their hearts. Fol-
“ ‘How can we prove it?’ the crocodile lowing themds a young man who is as
questioned. | wise as he is kind and gentle. Turn the
“You can call all your friends and eighty from your gate, but honor the
place them from here to the mainland, | youngest suitor as greater than they.’
each with his nose on the tail of thei “‘How do you know all this?’ the
neighbor before him; then I can easily princess questioned.
jump from one to the other, counting as “So the little hare told his story for the
Igo.’ third time, kiug so earnestly that the
“The crocodile agreed to this plan, | princess could not fail to be impressed by
thinking it 2 good one. ‘But how can we it. She thanked him for his advice, and
count the hares?’ he asked. after giving him some tender leaves to
“ “That we will decide after I have eat, prepared to receive the eighty-one
numbered the crocodiles,’ the hare sug- | brothers. They came a few minutes
| later, resplendent in the magnificent
| clothes they had put on in the princess's
the hare come to the same place next honor. I . or all looked so hand-
morning to do the counting. Of course | some that she found it hard to believe
the little animal was on hand bright and | the story of their cruelty. While they
y | were talking of their journey to her king-
“There stretched an unbroken line of | dom, however, one of the princes tond
crocodiles, a floating bridge to the main- | how they had made sport of a little hare
“The crocodile was satisfied, and bade
land! | too stupid to know that salt was not the
“The little hare lost no time hopping | best th for open and she
across it, you may be sure. As he reach- | noticed that the brother was the
ed the last crocodile and prepared to | only one who not the story. At
jump to shore, his heart was so full of | this, rage filled her gentle heart.
pride at the success of his ruse that he | ““Turn out the eighty princes!’ she
could not resist crying aloud: ! cried to her attendants; ‘no one who is
“ “How I have fooled you big creatures! | cruel to so small a creature asa little
I wished for a bridge to the mainland, | hareis fit to rule over a . But
and you have served my need!’ Then he | with you,’ she added, to the
jumped. youngest prince, ‘will I share throne,
‘ last crocodile opened his wide | for Jou are a wing: ain man.’
jaws and closed them again with a snap. | ‘ou may be sure the youngest prince
The hare was too quick to be caught, but | was happy to hear that, for, after once
the monster's teeth touched him and tore | seeing the beautiful princess, the t
off most of his fur! As the poor thing | of parting from her was like lead in
limped away, a crocodile called after breast.
him: “So the cruel brothers were drummed
“You see what happens when you trifie ' out of the palace with shouts of scorn;
with creatures than yourself!’ but the gentle prince and Jrincess went
“The little hare not know much, into the garden to thank little hare.
but he felt that he was learning. He | They could not find him, however, search
had
no heart to explore the beauties of the |
as they would; for as soon as he learned
mainland now, but crawled under a bush | of the success of his plan, he liad hoped
the roadside and wished that some one | away to see the world, wiser for his day's
would tell him how to cure his wounds. ; expesicnces.
“After some time he heard the noise of | “Is that all?" Alice asked.
many people on the road. He crept out, “That is all,” Nurse answered. “And
to see what was coming, beheld a | now it is time for you to go to bed."
crowd of young men, carrying burdens as | —Retold by B. M. Burrell, in August St.
if were ona journey. Nicholas,
all § and handsome, Sd wore beatiful a a"
clothes fit for princes. | ——First County Councilor—Here's a
“One of them spied the little hare and np lo ny
cried: ‘Well, friend, why do you look so | Second Ditto—You're there.
t
ET ei
“Let's have it dug up for a sewer.”
da wouldn't it he proper to pave it
“Of course; | you understood
that. Then, after it ispaved and a sewer
?
“The hare, proud of bei
by this fine gentleman,
ived the crocodiles.
ed loudly,
you are
not
called ‘friend’ |
how he had |
The men laugh-
254 gre of hewn said: ‘Since
it
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—This is the month the turk
laying.
:
Camphor. Our Correspondent’s Opinions.
Almost the entire supply of camphor | This column is al the service of those of our people
who desire | their views y sub,
now comes from Formosa. The demand | A gewerad or k cal interest: The Watchman” peck
has increased to such an extent that the | uo way be responsible for their ideas or stale-
attention of the leading countries of the nients. g real name of the author vinst accont.
world has been directed to up al peny al coutiincaiions, sek prithhel
when request is made.
new source of supply. This , | fins puiication ah
essary by the fact that in the manufacture |
THE MOHAIR GOAT.
Dear WATCHMAN :—When you behold
of modern explosives thal used in
‘high-power guns RO I [reg ae n
portant Hugtodiast J t | the wonderful structure, composed of
8 the world's pr e (Boy product, | rats, puffs and switches, erected upon the
it is by no means certain that it may be devoted head of the modern woman, and
Tatts grase Quins in the desited quam Sities at all | yoy wish to take a retrospective view of |
inst any such conti 2 the | the history of that same structure, it is
growth of the camphor is being en- |
F
shrubs have thrived won- i deceased lepers of the tar East, nor yet,
operation in Formosa
camphor is to chop the
cut into small | come.
the i the cam. | But come to the wonderful West, and
is
in charge
look for the beautiful, white, wavy locks
ntry adopt a differ- Hl Hn
| of the happy, healthy, fun-loving, mohair
of the shrubs like ' Pry ue
the shrubs quickly
they have attained a
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from which false hair is supposed to
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goat of the non-shedding variety. This
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three feet they are cut | ever adorned the human head.
ne-machine at a heigl This species of goat is the result of
fom the gious, a crossing the Turkish, non-shedding, an-
ng process, and no a ugh extract. | ora goat with the South African hair
i goat, and the fibre of its fleece is not too
tender stubble other shoots | fine to make a very good imitation of
and the cutting process canbe human hair.
ance year Jor seversl yeas. The raising of angora goats is becom-
obtained by this than by | ing quite an important industry in the
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' Harper'sWeekly. ding, mohair goat
amount of intelligent care and wise man-
agement to make a success of it. The
Watt, an Englishman, first discovered ' herding or feeding must be done with
the power of steam by noticing that the | oro care and regularity. All sudden
was frequently pushed up by the steam in | changes of feed must be guarded against,
its effort to get out. This resulted in his | as well as any other conditions that
making the first steam engine. Since | would have a tendency to cause shedding
Watt made the fi i |
ra) : CN ig of the wool or hair.
flues in the boiler, safety-valves, ern- | The clipping is done not oftener than
ors, and devices to oy the NE re- | once in eighteen months or two years.
maining in steam already partially used. This is to give the hair time to grow as
Tokey ye Sov the swift Jxomotives long as possible.
rawing a passenger trains from |, :
coast to coast, the powerful “Mogul” en- | Ong 18 worth two dollars per pound. If
gines for long freight trains and the mas- | twenty inches long it commands fifteen
Sive gations ow a facory ue. | dollars per pound, prices ranging between
: ners | these two figures according to length and
Mauretania are making new rec- | 3
ords every year. Threshing is done by | quality.
steam machinery, and in the city the They must be provided with proper
steam roller helps to pave the streets, the | shelter to protect them from the heat
steam hoist helps to build steam-heated
skyscrapers, and steam fire engines pro-
tect the lives within these buildings. It
Shears Het fives us coding drinks, Cons | animals cannot carry them about.
res even skating in summer py | : ;
rating steam engines that drive pow- | The herd which the writer had the
erful ice-making machines.—April Si. | Pleasure of studying belongs to Mrs.
Mrs.
Nicholas. | F. A. Pierce, of Galesville, Oregon.
What is Electricity? : *
| and each one comes when its name is
wonder how the modern electric cars. | of hair hanging o ir fa it
trains, and locomotives are operated, and ANging Over thely faces thm
what electricity is. No one knows what
electricity is. We know some of the Se€.
things that it will do; we have, to a cer-| This herd is accompanied by a register-
til exte, Jearmed Siow to control i ed male of imported south African stock.
i gl A ae. Ye in | When in pasture it is carefully guard-
it is one of the most important forces, if | €d by the faithful goat dog, "Oso," a
not the most impertant force, of which | large, beautiful animal with a shaggy,
we have any Jowjedge. We are aigost gray coat. He will allow nothing to
NE hd a Bg SF grea; Toress o come near his goat friends and rounds
gravitation. For the present we must be them up very carefully at the approach
of danger. But he has a few favorites
among them, and can sometimes be seen
content to observe such forces in action,
and to devise the best methods to control |
standing near one of these, snapping at
fleas, flies or any other insects that may
them. In this knowledge mankind has
progressed wonderfully within a few
happen near.
A short personal sketch of the woman
years.—From “Nature and Science” in
April St. Nicholas.
who is making a success of this business
will doubtless be of interest to the
WATCHMAN readers.
Little Charlotte Allen was born at Key
West, Florida, February 22nd, 1874. Some
of her early experiences can be told bet-
ter in her own words.
"Some of my first pets were littie alli-
gators.”
“Wouldn't they bite?”
“Yes, they would bite but ! had them
fastened with chains. 1 had two of them.”
“What did you feed them?”
“Fish, my father caught fish every day-
So there were plenty for us and the
“It is never too late to mend,” is one
| of those deceiving proverbs which seem
born of human fatuity. It is often too
late to mend the health which has been
neglected until Nature herself is exhaust-
ed and gives up in ink There are
always some people 0 procrastinate
until their opportunity is gone forever.
The wiser proverb is “never put off until
tomorrow, what you can do today.” If
you have undue fullness after eating,
eructations, sour risings, bad taste in the
mouth; if you are nervous, irritable,sleep-
less, don’t wait a day before
the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden
Discovery. The first dose is the first
“Could you take care of them when
they got big?”
“When they were about three feet long
| we turned them loose because we were
moving away from that place.”
“Tell how you sleep in the same room
with a bear,” said a friend who was pres-
ent.
“That was while we were moving. My
father had taken the door offi the house
we were leaving to put it on the one into
which we were going to move, several
miles away. My sister and I, aged twelve
and eight respectively, were left at the
doorless house to see that nothing was
carried away by the mixed Spanish and
negro element that lived in the neighbor-
hood.
“Father intended to return the same
evening but was unexpectedlly delayed.
When it began to grow dark we propped
some boards up against the opening for a
door, stretched some mosquito bar across
the room in front of the bed to keep out
the mosquitoes, and went to bed.
“Before we had gotten soundly to sleep
we heard the boards fall, and something
walked in over them. It came to the
mosquito bar and sniffed several times
then backed away, went to the opposite
corner of the room and lay down.
“Filled with horror, hardly daring to
breathe, we lay huddled together through
that awful night, staring with wide-open
eyes through the darkness, toward the
corner occuvied by the terrible creature.
Electric Battery Possibilities.
You are all familiar with some of the
can do with an electric battery.
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us in the least.”
Later, with her people, she went to
New Orleans, thence to Galveston and
from there into the interior of Texas,
no longer necessary to go among the.
in Florida and Texas under the | peasant women of Europe, nor is it nec-
ederal government. It | ageary to look to the diseased heads of |
to any of the other mysterious sources
| product can be dyed to any shade that i
ancient process in use in Formosa. Pacific coast States. But the non-shed- |
requires a great
where she learned to ride the range, as
| many western girls do.
There through courage and presence
| of mind, though only ten years old, she
! escaped being captured by a band of
| negroes. She was riding homeward
across the country and had to ford a
creek. When she was near the middle of
the stream she saw several negroes com-
ing down the opposite bank into the
water to get her before she could get out
i of the water. Quick as a flash she wheel-
ed her horse, retreated up the bank and
went flying down along the creck to an-
other ford a few miles away.
Some years after this her people moved
to Southern California. There, at the
' Floral Festival of Santa Barbara, in 1895,
she was awarded the first prize in an
' equestrienne contest, she being adjudged
the best rider. The following year (1896)
she entered the list again, and again car-
ried off the banner, as well as the heart
of young Frank Pierce the son of a prom-
inent farmer. There is reason to believe
that there was a mutual surrender in this
case for in the autumn of 1896 she re-
linquished the name of Allen to become
Mrs. F. A. Pierce.
Mrs. Pierce is a dressmaker as well as
a “sry good cook, as many, including the
writer can testify, as the years go by she
divides her attemtion between her four-
footed kid pets and an interesting family
of three sons and a daughter. And I
might add that no one is prouder or
more interested in Mrs. Pierce and her
| herd of pets than Mrs. Pierce's husband.
i M. V. THOMAS.
| Glendale, Oregon.
Justice to Mr. Gable.
lo the Editor Democratic Watchman.
!
| Proposed Canada Treaty Detrimental
| to Republic's Harmony.
| Obliterate $1,893,000.000 Silver Coin.
To The Editor Democratic Watchman.
The United States market of higher
values then monarchial colony, the ac-
| ceptance of treaty would enhance Canadi-
{ an farmers and labor and reduce earning
| power of American farmers of Northern
: and Middle States, causing greater mi-
| gration of labor to towns and city booms,
| by greater incongruous trades of round-
| about ways of distributing commodities,
| from the producer to consumer, that are
already too far apart for intelligent econ-
| omics to protect the people's money.
| Canada increased holdings of United
{ States gold coin in five years from $40,
| 814,621, to now in sight of $80,352,836,
| equaling $12 per capita, compare with
currency per capita year 1896. Gold
| $2.76; silver, $1,03; paper, $6.03, to now
of gold, $15.05; silver, $1.08; paper, $12.32
! there parsimonious increase silver five
| cents per capita. This English colony are
| not allowed to coin silver only through
the parent government and England ob-
: tains the profits of seigniorage, obtained by
‘edicts of single gold standard that re-
quires a vast army and navy to enforce
{ it. That causes high priced food by labor
| waste and upheavals of government
{ Whereby money centres can have high
commission and purchase cheaply agri-
cultural and material first supply, by com-
plicated barters of trade in demonetizing
| silver, thence "wars for the markets” with-
| out any regards on ultimate of aggres:
! sive sectional rule that side-tracks equity
{ that causes greater deception of trade
' and government [statistics.
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Mohair twelve inches '
{ and from rain, for when those massive
fleeces became saturated with moisture
may seem strange, but it is this same hot | they are so burdensome that the little!
Referring to an editorial in a recent | The volume of $1,893,000,000 silver coin
number of The WATCHMAN under the | not accounted for in Treasury annual report
caption “Philadelphia Democrats Vindi- | director of the mint year 1910 monetary
cated.” | system of the world, in reply to my in
In your article, as | understand it, you | terrogatives on discrepancies. from docu-
defend the stand taken by the Democrat- | ments of year 1896. Received kindly the
ic organization of Philadelphia in refus- | following reply: “India for instance, ap-
ing to fuse with so-called reform parties peared in the 1896 table to have $950,
by accepting their candidates as the latter 000,000 and the estimate was credited to
, when presented profess to be against the | F. C. Harriman, an English economic
machine until they are elected and for it | writer; since that time the monetary sys-
whenever they succeed to power. As in- | tem of India has been reorganized and an
| stances you cite the election by fusion in entirely new issue of rupees carried which
1905 of Sheriff Wilson H. Brown, Coroner | is maintained at a fixed relation to gold:
J. M. R. Jermon and State Senator in the | We have eliminated the old stocks of ru-
Eighth District, Vivian Frank Gable. You ' pees entirely and taken account of only
are correct when you state that Sheriff | the new coinage. While the old rupees
Brown and Coroner Jermon betrayed the | are still a part of the country’s monetary
| Pierce has a name for each of her pets’
Many persons, young and old, often called. Some of them have such a mass!
| has to be kept braided to allow them to |
Democrats and turned their offices, as
far as patronage was concerned, over to
| the regular Republicans. But as to Sen-
ator Gable, 1 take exception to your
statement when you say:
“Vivian Frank Gable became a more
obedient tool to the Penrose organization
in the special session of 1906 than Kepser
ever was. At the next election these
| political recreants asked the Democratic
organization to again pull machine chest-
nuts out of the fire for them. Is it sur-
| prising that the invitation was declined?
' Wouldn't it have been an outrage if it
had been accepted? To our mind that
| proposition is established. A year later
i the element which was responsible for
| Brown, Jermon and Gable nominated
| Ernest L. Tustin for State Senator and
| invited the Democratic organization to
| aid them. The inyitation was reluctant-
\ly accepted and Tustin betrayed every
| obligation of honor in supporting the
| Republican Machine.”
Now as a former resident of Philadel-
phia and familiar with the political situa-
| tion as well as the excellent record of
! Vivian Frank Gable I am somewhat at a
! loss how to briefly point out your mis-
| takes in that part of your article which I
have quoted. In the first place Mr. Gable,
| a city party man, was by fusion elected
in 1905 to fill the unexpired term of a
Republican Senator, Horatio Hackett,
deceased. He served in the special ses-
sion of 1906, called by Governor Penny-
packer, and his record will show that he
! did not train with the “Penrose machine”
and that he stood for every reform meas-
ure presented. In 1906 he was the nomi-
nee of the Democratic, Prohibition, City,
Lincoln and U. L. parties to succeed him-
self for the full term of four years. The
Republican nominee, John T. Murphy,won
in that Republican stronghold with only
101 majority. Senator Gable would have
been elected but for the treachery of
Democratic committeemen in a few dis-
tricts and had he not neglected his in-
dividual interests during the campaign
by giving nearly all his time to the duties
of chairman of the Lincoln party in an
effort to elect Lewis Emery, Jr., Govern-
or. So far as I know Mr. Gable never
betrayed his Democratic allies and while
he did not take an active part in the
campaigen of 1010 I have reason to be-
lieve that he voted for Webster Grim
with whom he served in the Senate.
You are also wrong in reference to
Ernest L. Tustin. In 1906 he was the
Republican nominee for Senator in the
Fourth District. His Democratic oppon-
ent was John M. Hill while the City,
Lincoln and Prohibition parties nominat-
ed William C. Mason; Mr. Tustin receiv-
ed 14,146 votes and was elected by 430
plurality over Mason while Hill received
3,811 votes.
The WATCHMAN is invariably reliable
not write for the sake of controversy but
knowing of the earnest work of Senator
Just at day-break the next morning it 80t (aie for better government, in city and | in
up and went away without disturbing |geate | feel ander the circumstances he | PPO
{ should be “vindicated.”
Respectfully yours,
AMES H. FITZGERALD.
| Mechanics Valley, Pa., March 28, 1911.
and its little "mix up” is probably due to
being unfamiliar with Philadelphia poli.
tics during the period referred to. | do.
| stock they are mainly held in hoards, with-
i drawn from circulation * ¢ * Thees
| timate for China in the 1896 report was
| $750,000,000 and we have dropped China
| from the table entirely because it seems
| to be impossible to make any trustworthy
| estimate. Siam, which was carried at
$193,000,000, has since adopted the gold
| standard and issued a new silver coinage
| bearing a fixed relation to gold and we
! now include only the new stock of silver.”
i Siam is now quoted currency per capita:
i Gold, £0.02; silver, $7.07; paper, $0.34;
| compare with vear 1896: Gold, $0.12;
| silver, $38.78; paper money, none. The
| above indicates a woefully melting of
{ silver coin for fine arts that is, smothered
from announcement and such, with edicts
of stop coinage of silver dollars of em-
bossed motto: “In God We Trust.” The
public confidence is terribly shaken.
The desirables in touch with our Re-
public the monetary system per capita.
Country. Gold. Silver. Paper.
France $23.57 $10.46 $3.82
Mexico $276 $4.12 $3.76
China vear 1910 dropped oul entirely.
Year 1908 None $ 1.06 None
Straits Set'mnts$ 06 44 $5.06
Spain $525 S$ 8.82 $4.88
Hail Columbia, since the discovery of
America the world’s production of gold
and silver bullion per ratio weight is 16.1
to 1 gold to year 1910 and from year 1860
to 1910 is 12 silver to 1 gold and the last
three vears average 9} to 1 gold and the
fluctuating commercial scale from year
1687 to year 1874 is 14.14 to 1625 to 1
gold. So prior to year 1872 money tink-
ering the world had practically a staple
commercial value of silver to gold a sta-
bility not obtainable by England, Ger-
many or Russia of one family in combine
to force by army and navy a fixed rela-
! tive value of silver to gold by there says
without any regard to the world’s aver-
age production of precious metals and the
need of greater introduction of silver coin
currency to obtain trade stability of en-
couragement to honest labor. “Do if
now.” Resume coinage of standard silé
ver dollars of embossed motto: “In God
We Trust.” Revise national tariff by a
per centage of equalizing dutiables of one
rate on all nations or colony. “High or
low tariff make it commercially honest,
whereby the people can understand it."
The late Hon. Secretary of the Treasury,
Daniel Manning, advocated ad valorem
system honestly collected, and we need
such now, to include all foreign charges
to land imported merchandise on our
shores.
Want a square deal to southern Repub-
lics and our own people knowledge would
be, to label commercial sugar beet or cane
and its proportional parts and on brew-
ers’ malt drinks, announce corn-glucose
| or barley hop brews, our government col-
‘ects a revenue on porter and beers made
| out of anything and thereby accessorials
| to frauds and suicidals.
| James WOLFENDEN,
Lamar, Pa.
History shows that when an epidemic
breaks out it begins in the alleys and
" hovels, where filth accumulates. It's so
the body. Foul accumulations are the
wning places of disease. To keep the
wels clean and active is a te
Dr. Pierce's
| to effect this result.
They do not beget the pill habit.