The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 14, 1889, Image 8

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    THE ELECTIONS.
Retutns from all except four cotn-
ties in Olio indicate the election of
Campbell, Democrat, for Governor, by
about 9000 plurality, The Democrats
ill have a majority of 2 in the State
Senate and of 6 to 8 in the House,
insuring them the election of a U. 5,
senator to succeed Payne. Governor
Foruker has cougratulated Mr, Caw p-
bell on bis election.
The latest returns from Iowa indie
cate a Democratic success, and the
Democrats claim the election of their
candidate for Governor by a plurality
of 7000. According to a telegram to
First Assistant Postmaster General
Clarkson the Legislature is in doubt,
Abbett’s plurality for Governor in
New Jersey, according to the latest re-
rurns, 18 over 11,000,
The plurality for Brackett, RRepub-
licar, for Governor of Massachusetts,
is over 5979, with one small town to be
heurd from,
The latest New York returns in-
dicate a Democratic plurality in the
State of 20.900. The anti-Mahone
majority in Virginia is about 30,000.
Caicaco, Nov, T.—A special des-
patch from Des Moines, Towa, to the
Journal (Rep. ) says: While the Dem
crits claim thelr entire State ticket Is
elected, the indications to-day are that
the resulton the State ticket, except
Governor, is doubtful, and that the Re-
publicans will have seven majority in
the House and one in the Senate.
The Des Moines Register (Rep.) con-
ceded 3000 plurality for Doles, the
Democratic candidate for Governor.
Ricumoxp, Va., Nov. 7.—At md-
night, official and unofficial returns
from every county in the State except
seven, show a Democratic majority of
42.715.
The Ilouse stands—79 Democrats,
14 Republicans; doubtful, 7. Senate—
20 Democrats, 9 Republicans; doubtful,
1.
This is the smallest representation
the Republicans have had 1n the Legis-
lature in the history of the State,
CorumBus, Nov. 7.—~The indications
are now on figures received at Re-
publican and Democratic headquarters
that the Republicans will elect all the
candidates on the State ticket with the
exception of Foraker and possibly
Lieutenant Governor. The Republican
Committee sent out telegrams to county
chairmen for the vole on the
respective candidates in the counties
and they have heard from thbirly-
gix out of the eighty-eight coun-
ties. The returns show that in these
counties the balance of the ticket
without much variance in the figares
bas received 11.650 votes more than
Foraker, or rather the bead of the
ticket has run behind that wuch on
these figures. It is estimated that
Campbeil must bave a plurality of at
least 12.000 to carry the rest of the
ticket,
Joston. Nov. 7.—The vote of the
town of Goshold, received to-day, com-
pletes the election returns from the en-
tire State and make the total footings
for Govornor: Brackett, R:p., 126,801;
Russell, Dem,, 120817; Dlackmer,
Pro., 13,854; Marks, Labor, 1lL
Brackett’s plurality, 5084,
- a ——— ioe
+ — Earthquake shocks were felt al
Cairo and Jacksonville, Illinois, ay 1.50
s’clock on the morning of the 24, and
at St. Louis at 2 o'clock. Houses were
shaken and windows rattled, but po
jamage was done. At Calro the vibra-
was accompanied by “a low report.”
The boiler in the new grist mill of E,
Phelpe, near Frenchburg, Kentucky,
giploded on the 2d, killing three men,
sue of them the son of the proprietor.
Two others were injured. Julia Me.
Devitt was suffocated by gas from a coal
stove in Emmittsburg, Maryland, on
the 24. By the premature explosion
yf a blast in Barbour county, West
Virginia, on the 2d, George and Frank
Wiseman were killed, and Alexander
Oldacre was fatally injured.
—A satement 18sued Dy the Treas
ury Department shows that durlog the
month of October there was a net in-
erelise of $0,108,120 in the circulation
and a net decrease of $840,847 in the
money aud bullion in the Treasury.
The increase in the circulation was in
standard silver dollars amounting to
$2,544,880; in gold certificates, $4 261,-
#80; in national bank notes, 83 866,757,
in subsidiary silver, $950,029, and iu
United States notes, $8700,229, There
was a decrease of $262,644 inthe circu-
lation of gold coin and a decrease of
$2,067,011 in the National Bank circu
lation. The total sirculation Novem-
ber it is stated at $1,414,121.120, and
the money and the bullion in the
Treasury at $648 220.124.
—While Sheriff Reynolds, W. A.
Holmes and Eugene Middleton were
taking eight Apache Indians and one
Mexican to the Yuma Penitentiary,
in Arizona, on the morning of the 2d
the two former were killed by their
prisoners pear Riverside, and Middle
town was mortally wounded. Asthe
prisoners were being walked up a
beavy sand wash one of them snatcued
a pistol from Holmes and shot him and
his alds. The Indians then robbed the
dead and started South, The Mexican
was subsequently captured,
At Cnerosve, sanuas on Lue eve-
ring of the 24 Charles North was
stabbed and killed by George Hall,
North bad endeavored to join the
Farmers’ Alliance, but was black-
balled, He suspected Hall and John
‘Wilkins of opposing bis membership
to the Alliance, aud at the close of the
meeting knocked Wilkins down, He
then assailed Hall, who drew a knife
and stabbed him
w= Joseph owt commiiieu suicide in
Streator, Illinois, on the 4th. He left
a note saying he bad killsd Hattie Lee
on the 20th uit, A searching party
jound sis vedy 1b 4 soem field near the
ty.
— Henry Miller, Joseph Martin and
Narcourt Jolly, cowboys, were frozen
to death near Folsom, New Mexico,
during the blizzard of the 1st. They,
with others, were attending a herd of
*
! —President Harrison on the 2d,
f signed the proviamations admitting
North and South Dakota to the
Union.
—Edwin Cooper, Town Treasurer of
Greenfield, Michigan, shot and killed
his brother, Peter, at the breakfast
table on the 3d. They had quarrelled
over the mavagement of their father’s
farm, which had beed turned over to
them. Andreas Lopez, a Papago ln-
dian, the murderer of Peter Verdier,
was lodged in jail In Preston, Anzona,
on the 54, He resisted arrest and was
shot through the neck, The wound 8
not dangerous. He confessed to the
murder. Ile was also identified as the
person who two months ago robbed a
stage near Weaver,
—Haggal Westbrook, a farmer in
Verginnes township, Kent county,
Michigan, on the 4th attacked his wife
and three little girls with a hammer
and inflicted fatal injuries, after which
he committed sulcide by cutting his
throat with a razor. Another accouut
says that the children were instantly
killed, and that Mrs. Westbrook Is
mortally wounded. Westbrook wus in
financial difficulty and had become in-
sane. While a party of 12 or 13-year-
old boys were bird hunting vear Tren-
ton, New Jersey, on the 3d, one of the
party accidentally shot and killed Char-
les, only child of Mrs, Dolly Darker.
—A despatch from Tuscon, Ari.
zona, says that, early on the morning
of the 4th, a fight took place between
a detachment of troops from Fort
Huacbaca, under Sergeant Picketts,
and Indians, 10 miles from Crittenden.
A pumber of shots were exchanged,
but noue of the soldiers were hit
Corporal Griffin is missing,
—While Mrs, Hiram Wilford was
walking through her house, in Ramsey,
Illinois, on the evening of the 3d, with
a lamp in her band, ber little son ran
against her, The lamp was thrown to
the floor and exploded, selling her
clothing on re. Her husband, a crip-
ple, attempted to smother the fames,
but did not succeed until she was
fatally burned, She died soon after.
~The boiler of the [ishing steamer
S, 8, Brown exploded on the morning
of the 4th while the vessel was off the
New Jersey coast, about 25 miles from
the Delware Dreakwater., John Le-
costa, of Connecticut, was killed, and
several others were Injured, among
them Chief Engineer Chas, Daily and
Assistant Engmesr William Ludlow,
both from Connecticut also.
—By a rush of melted iron from the
stacks of Colebrook Furnace, No. 1, at
Lebanon, Penna., on the afternoon of
the 4th, Hemwry Bohr, Henry Fertig,
Isaac Slegrist, Willlam Spyder and
Harvey Beck were killed, and John
Robr. Benjamin Eck and Enock Eisen-
bauer were severely burned, The men
were overwhelmed by the metal while
at their work. The hoisting shaft of
the furnace was destroyed.
~Mrs, H, E. Harris on the morning
of the 5th, took from a Jewelry store
in Louisville, Kentucky, a palr of
diamond earings and a fOnger ring
which she had left to be repaired. A
well dressed man saw her receive the
diamonds and followed her. When
they had reached an alley the man
snatched the pocket-bosk from her
hand and made his escape up the alley,
The robbery was witnessed by a num-
ber of people,
— Mattie Brown, aged 13 yeas, who
worked in Reager’s boslery mlil, in
Norristown, Pa., was caught in the
shafting by her hair on the afternoon
of the 5th and Injured so badly that
she died in a short time,
~ A telegram from Santa Fe says
that one of the severest snow and
wind storms In the history of
Mexico has prevailed for the past three
days and reports are being received of
great damage to live stock on the
northern ranges, A number of cow.
boys and sheep herders have been lost
and it i18 feared they have perished.
All the trains are from five to twelve
hours late and the snow plows are kept
in constant operation on the Rulon
and Glorietta Mountains,
—In Camden county, Missouri, on
the 24, a yonng son of Edward C.
Hurst was beaten by John and Robert
Swanagan, living near by. The boy
went home and reported the affair, and
bis father and neighbor, W. B. Green,
started after the Swanagans, When
close upon them John Swanagan, who
had a double-barrelled shot grn, fired
and mortally wounded Hurst » | killed
Crreen,
—E. H, Van Hoesen, formerly cash-
jer of the Toledo National Bank, in
Toledo, Ohlo, was arrested on the Oth,
charged with embezzling $58,000 from
that institution. J, M. Kee, formerly
teller in the same bank, was also ar-
rested, charged with complicity in the
crime, Ball was fixed at $70,000 in’each
case, George Bell, the notorious bank
burglar, was released on the 2d from
the Maryland Penitentiary. Bell was
a leading member of the Brockway and
Cleary gang, which tapped the Mer-
chants’ and Third National Banks, of
Baltimore, in 1880, for $12,000. Dell
was sentenced to ten years, and his
term expired on the 2d, the regular
commutation going into effect.
~The people of South Doston, Hali-
fax county, Virginia are excited over
the attempted assassination on the bth
of K. R. Niblin and others by negroes,
who fired upon the party from ambush,
Mr. Niblin was shot 1a the eye and
Jultan Chappel was also shot, but not
seriously, Three negroes have been
arrested and were taken to Danville on
the 6th for safe keeping.
~Mr, Cabely, of Los A Call-
fornia, who was Constable of Havana
Township, Kansas, in 1872, when the
Benders made their escape, says that
the entire Bender family was extermi-
nated near Coal Creek, in the Rocky
Hill region, immediately after the
murder of Dr. York,
wJoreminh and Mary E., rem
pectively ¥ and 5 years, children of
Jereminh Shaw, residing in Haverhill,
Massac usetts, were found dead buried
in 8 sand bank near their home on the
morning of the Oth, The bank was a
high one and bad been rendered dan.
gerous by excavations,
~ROrge
dangerously wounded Osborne Daisey,
also colored, in Washington. D. C,, on
the evening of the Oth, Policeman
Crippen attempted to arrest Bush and
was shot in the right breast, He still
retained his revolver and sbot Bush
twice. The two men then grappled,
and, during the melee, a revolver was
discharged, the bullet entering Lhe
officer’s brain, killing him instantly.
Bush died early on the morning of the
6th. Busey is in a critical condition,
—In Petersburg, Virginia, on the
7th, John Drewer, a colored caterer,
was arrested for using incendiary
language on the public street. The
expression which he was charged with
using was addresed to an assemblage
of negroes, and was that Lieutenant
Crichton, who was killed at the fire
that morniog, “ought to have ben dead
and In hell years ago.’’ The Mayor fined
him $100 and required a peace bond
penalty of $500, On an appeal he was
required to give Doth an appeal and
peace bond in the sum of $1000 each.
—Stephen Wright, aged 28 years, of
Morrisville [’enn., on the 7th accident-
ally killed himself while gunning near
Trenton, New Jersey, [lis cocked
gun caught In a bush and the load was
discharged In his right side,
— A telegram from the City of Mexi-
co reports the valcanu of Colima In
active eruption. Many houses in the
neighborhood of the mountain have
fallen aud the woods for miles around
are on fire,
—J. L. Fordemore, a leading citizen
of Scotio. Nebraska, was shot dead in
the street by Calvin Madison on the
evening of the bth. Jealousy was Lhe
cause,
— Albert Marea cut his wife's throat
at their howe in Savannah, Georgia,
early on the morning of the Tih, kill-
ing ber instantly, The woman had
been to a festival with her sister, and a
voung man escorted them, It Is sup-
poised the deed was caused by Jealousy.
The full vote for Sate Treasurer in
Pennsylvania — four counties, Alle-
gheny, Erie Monree ana Washington,
being estimated-—glives Boyer a plurili-
ty of 60,042,
Photography in Natural Colors.
om the address on t
graphy of the Presiden
on of the British Associs
alluding
by manual work,
ave from time to time been
ne being
¥
'
vé
teed
» wh sy
insted on a credulous public
reed
to
and usually ¢
anger
vougs
reply
a
1
A":
mittee h
macs
by the action of light
the damage
y th
ily speaks wl of pro-
the spectrum its natural
colors is to chlorinize a
white Light till it
r. heat till it bee
it to
AEAGINCS 8
mes rather
a bright Spec.
BOTH then
Fx-
are
tints,
theso
oxidized wiuet being
med at the red end of
and a reduced product
. Can
A proces
¢ which reproductions
SOT
nev nore
§ to be useful must be
are
OR»
quicl
be a
y+ in other words, it must
; and not a printing process,
and it must be taken in the camera, for
ner
ik
a bright hght but also a prolonged ex.
posure. Now it can be conceived thal
in a substance which absorbs all the
visible spectrum the molecules
any printi yrocess requires not only
scives into masses,
particular rays by which
shaken; but it is almost
quite—impossible to believe that when
they are
be so obliging as to deposit in that the
particular size of particle which should
give to the image the color of the
nucleus on which it was depositing. 1
am aware that in the early days of pho-
tography we heard a good deal about
curious results that had been obtained
in negatives, where red brick houses
were shown as red and the blue sky as
bluish. The eause of these fow coinei-
dencesis not hard to explam, and would
be exactly the same as when the red
brick houses were shown as. bluish and
the sky as red in a negative. The
records of the production of the latter
negatives are naturally not abundant,
since they would not attract much at-
tention. I may repeat, then, that pho-
tography in natural colors by a print
ing-out prooess—by which I mean by
the action ot hight alono—as not only
possible but has been done, but that
the production of a negative in natural
oolors from which prints in natural
colors might be produced appears, in
tho present state of our knowledge, to
be impossible, Bapposing it were not
impracticable, it would be unsatis-
factory, ns the light with which the
picture was impressed would be very
different from that in which it would
be viewed. Artists are fully aware of
this difficulty in painting, and take
their precaution against it.
Itis not strange that fast living
should sometimes bring :tarvation,
Dry
world more than the J.od
Work and Song.
In a alose little kitchen she worked all day,
While the birds sang shrill on the budding
trees,
And the bright earth ealled her to come away
And follow the track of the laughing breeze,
She could not answer the bright earth's ealls,
With lowly duties her days were filled
And her life was bounded Dy kitchen walls,
Yet she sang with a joy that would not be
stilled.
Through May's fresh splendors and tender
June,
Through fierce July with its cruel heat,
She worked on still, while the simple tune
Welled up from her heart unchaoged and
sweet,
A man passed by to his daily toll,
And sick of his work and his life was he,
With eyes bent down to the cheerless soil
As though there was never a sky Lo see,
He heard the notes with a vacant ear.—
What did he care for a servant's song?
Yet day by day rose the cadence clear
Till he caught its joy as he passed along.
And his heart grew lighter about his work,
And he gained fresh strength for the dally
fight,
And a softenad smile in his eyes would lurk
When he heard her song coming home at
night.
And was that all? O Sister mine!
1s it not enough if we help one soul?
Must the help be measured by rule and line?
Need we fret that we cannot know the whole
The kitchen lass may have never known
Of the help that came from her dally song,
But the foy of singing is still her own
And shes works to music the whole day long.
Good Housekeeping.
“THE PLEASANTEST ROOM
IN THE HOUSE.”
BY EDITH ELDRIDGE,
We had been married a month, and
were just beginning to feel at home in
our cosy parsonage, of which the peo-
ple were so proud.
John and I walked through the rooms
with great satisfaction, and pronounced
it all “very nice, indeed,” from the
real chambers upstairs to the conveni-
ent little kitchen. It was comfortable,
homelike, and I flattered myself there
was even an air of elegance about the
parlor; and the dining-room
what 1 wanted
most liveable
was just
largest
the sunniest, t,
in the not
Fm
“For you knov
gestive orgs
sant surroundings,
o'er and o'er agai
again next un
f
10%
0orning. :
my se 1ishness as I looked
John's study, back of the parlor, with-
in ear-shot of the kitchen.
It was a stupid On
wondered that my husban 1
ittle
ever
made one of those splendid sermons of
his nit. An idea flashed onme 1
would no longer benumb John's imag-
be-dwarf his powers of doing good by
room.
He should have the
Calling Hannah, 1 fell to work moving
his books and belongings into it. With
the assistance of one of the neighbor's
boys, we got the side-board and dining-
table removed to the old study, and
most of the books placed in order by
the time John came home from a fun-
eral, tired and hungry, to find me, with
dishevelled hair, jammed fingers, no
dinner, but such a pleasant surprise.
He looked aghast at me and then at
the room.
“You didn't complain, John, but I
saw you felt the dullness of your
study,” I said, excitedly, “and see how
nicely I have arranged your books!”
“The ‘Homiletic’ said: ‘Arrange
them so they will Jook well.” Bo you
seo I have put all the reds together,
and the olives look quite msthetic, next
the blues.”
John groaned and sat down, helpless-
ly, as he saw Taylor's ‘Holy Living
and Dying” leaning affectionately
against “Pickwick Papers” and Fish's
“Primitive Piety Revived,” supported
“And this is Friday, too,” he mutter-
ed. “But it is so very nice,” he said,
heroically, as he caught my disappoi nt-
ed look.
“Well, life went on. Our dinners
began to taste good again in our little
room, and John really seemed to enjoy
his new quarters, and I felt repaid,
when, one day, I became interested in
an article in a domestic journal that I
had recently taken, on *“The Grinding
of the Poor and Injustice to Our Ser-
vants.”
I was deeply affected, as it plotured
’
the temptations of working-girls, the;
influences of their surroundings on their |
characters, and the fearful responsibili- |
ties of mistresses. It wound up with—
“The kitchen should be the plessantest |
room in the house.”
This sank deep into my heart. Our |
kitchen certainly was not “the pleasant. i
est room in the house,” and Hannah |
was out & good many evenings,
This was no mere question of com.
fort, I thought; it was a matter of
duty.
It cost me a struggle; but next morn
ing, when John was away visiting his
sick people, I told my astonished hand |
maiden of my plan for her comfort and |
edification, and was answered by an in |
dignant snort and exclamation of “What |
i
I sent for some
cooking-stove, and
men
began
Soon the house was upside down. The
dining-room furniture was moved inte
ments into the study.
Everything was dust, confusion and
soot when John came home.
If he had
former move,
this one.
he
looked disgusted af
said.
I sat down the ecoal-scuttle
ered, unconscious that my tears were
on
|
making channels down my sooty nose
and checks.
I managed tosob ont something about
home pleasant for her,
Hannah flounced out of the room al
this, and said something about her
themselves above me!
the nu
is
“Why, Nellie, what
}
| and why have you everything
i 6
| turvy?” asked John.
1 w indionai ; 14
I grew indignant and told
5, 1 sh
$OIo
i bx Ng A Cliergyma
Mid Lave BENBO
land
SONA,
{ his poor d« pen
Well
A Strange Messenger,
| A little bird flew into E.R Hulld
| Co.'s store one day last week and after
flitting 14 the
perched on a chandelier, directly ove:
{the bead of David
| charge of the children’s department
| It was remarked at the time that should
| the bird alight upon the head of Mr,
James he would soon hear of the deatt
| of a friend. No sooner were the words
| said than the stranRe little visitor de
| scended directly upon the bead of the
| salesman and then darted out into the
| street and was gone.
Mr.
| tle son was dying and hastening home
found the message to be true. Thisin
cident actually ocourred, and those
who witnessed it were greatly astonish.
ed at the verification of an old sign.
abot room Lime
moe
at
James, who hm
————— ss —
Steel Pens,
nearly all the steel pens used in thi
country are manufactured here, though
20 years ago nearly all were imported.
Now only the highest priced ones are
imported. We use about 1,000,000 gros
every year, which isnot so large a num
ber as might appear, considering that if
represents fewer than three pens apiect
for all the inhabitants, As many peo
ple who use them wear out a gross (144
pens) or more in a year; it is eviden!
that there must be a great many whe
are made of imported steel, which i
preferred because it is more uniform
quality. It is rolled into big sheets and
eut into strips, after which it is anneal
ed, rolled to the thickness reg
then tempered and out and ®amped
into pens. Much skill is required in as
these operations and in those of finisre
tg she ns arn hp TS tant utastur
m san
little change for a Se an, ye!
Frarreny is a sort of bad money te
which our vanity gives currenay. 3
1t is better to do well than to say
well.
*
Ir nothing else 18 accomplished by
the visit of Emperor William to Con-
stantinople, the fact that the streets
are to be clesued is enough to pay for
the trouble and expense. That will be
event long to be remembered in
Turkey's chief city,
T1vEe big sleel companies put in bids
the Government with
steel plates for the new cruisers, By a
very fortunate arrangement each co~
which the
was competition between two firms as
to two classes, and each was lowest in
one class, That makes altogether a
very nice division of the work to be
done,
i a A
Tne fact that a few thieves should
by their plifering prevent many bun.
to the books of the Mercan-
| tile Library is indeed to be regretied,
| other course open to thems but to cur.
| tall the privileges of all, since the dis
honest few cannot be The
a great
| deal of good and it is not to the credit
of Philadelphia that management
is compelled to make Lhe new rules,
——————————
Base DALL as a business has been
pretty well worked, but an attempt 10
discovered,
| Mercantile Library has done
the
1%
establish a monopoly of players has re-
in prep-
a rival
| suited, as was to be expected,
| arations for formation of
| organization to those now existing. in
+3
wie
| the ordinary course of events the busi-
| ness will be overdone for a
then there will be a panic and another
attempt to get up } trust or
monopoly. In the there is
the risk that a 1088
interest solely
ime, and
a limited
meantine
fickle public may
in & game that played
as a business matter, ¢
of
manner
will
of
nposed
a theatrical en
demand a ret o the old system
games between
it without
+s however,
regard Ww
of the
harbor of New York.
drawing twenty
a clear
seaport,
pilot,
hint
or want of capacity,
channel in the
When a vessel
runs aground
harbor of a great
that something be done to
the
capacity,
feet
the
time
tore that
on day in
it 18
res
harbor to the first class,
Firemen have re-
proposed federation of
railroad employes, which will
Tne locomotive
soled to join the
no doubt
be accomplished. The several orders,
while retaining their local autonomy
and the right of self-government, will
be united in a separate body, to which
they will have to surrender a part of
their powers, as the States of the Uni
surrendered some of powers
Congress, As the federation
brought about by the failure of railroad
strikes, due to a want of harmony be-
tween the several classes of railroad
employes, it is evident that the purpose
of uniting was to make the labor or-
ganizations stronger for the purpose of
a strike. They are getting ready for a
possible struggle, and when coufeder-
ated will be under the same Kind of
temptation to begin a fight the
nations of Europe are under when they
have large and well equipped standing
armies. Whether the federation shail
be good for the men or otherwise,
depends wholly on what use shall be
| made of their assumed power. If their
| demands shall be reasonable their power
{to enforce them will be to their ad-
| vantage; if they are unreasonable the
demands cannot be granted, and the
| federation will only bring on a costly
| and useless strike,
m
their to
Was
3s
that
A TERRIBLE STURY comes from
| New York of a woman driven io in-
| sanity by bunger and want. It seems
| like the irony of fate that ber litte
ones should be cared for by the Society
ts Prevent Cruelty to Children and the
mother sent to the hospital for the in-
sane, after suffering had robbed her of
ber reason and led ber to commit a
murderous assault, The time when
she ought to have been helped was when
she became sick and unable to care for
berself and family, and if she had come
t) the notice of the right people she
| would have been cared for then. There
are abunlant charities in New York,
snd no one need starve in its streels
But the difficulty there, as elsewbere, is
to find the deserving or necessitous
cases and put the agencies of char-
ity at work, Wien crime or some
other startling denouncement brings
sharply before the public eye the dis-
tress 0! the very poor, there 's often un
deserve] criticism of charitable organ «
gations that stand ready to help all de-
serving cases brought to the attention,
but are hampered in their work by ihe
many fraudulent claims made upon
their funds