6 THE SCBAKTON TRIBUTE WEDNESDAY MORNING, AFBH. B, 1896.. nsnniTE's second day V Staidlog Room Was Utilized Daring the Aftenoon Scssloa. MAXY INSTRUCTIVE LECTURES Crk SMtaary Tableau Fsatara of tha Aftsraooa Sasstoa-Iaursstlag Pa para Bead by Panose Well Kaowa Looally. Tes,terday morning' session of the teachers' Institute In the Young Men's Christian Association hall was opened with prayer by Kev. O. L. Aldrlch, of Grace Reformed church. The first number on the programme was to have been a paper by Professor Twltmeyer, of HonesUnle, on "Froebel and His Theory of Education," but sud den Illness prevented his being present Livy S. Richard, editor of The Tribune, read a paper on "Practical Composition,"-which, by request of the insti tute, Is printed in full in another col umn. H. C. Shafer, cashier of the Scranton Savings bank, read a paper on "Bank ing Methods." It was a carefully .writ ten and concise effort In which all su perfluous verbiage' that might create confusion In the mirvls of the teachers was omitted, and which contained the practical and common-sense facts of that part of the banking business with which the depositor conies in direct contact. He urged the women, espe cially, to acquaint themselves with the correct way of making out deposit flips. Not more than one woman in fifty, he said, understands this primary duty of the depositor. Checks should be made out to the debit of the Bame signature originally placed by the depositor on the bank's signature book. A woman may have an account as Mrs. John Jones, and oftentimes send In a check signed Tilllo Jones. In the sight of . the bank. It is not known or cared whether or not the woman is married; but the rule of the bank Is for a check to be signed as the account is held. There are, however, many wo men serving well and faithfully In the banks cf the country. At the close of Mr. Shafer'a paper, a recess was taken lor fifteen minutes. MIS8 M'MOLLAN'S ADDRESS. Miss A. J. McMollan, of the Blooms burg State Normal school, gave a blackkboard talk on phonetic reading, in which she laid special stress on proper pronunciation of vowels and consonants and the words they com posed. Older persons. In particular, should caution themselves to pronounce correctly, that the younger and mimic minds might gain a correct habit. A boy's education was discussed In two divisions, before and in school, by Mrs. L. M. Oates and ex-Superintendent O. W. Phillips, respectively. Judge H. M. Edwards was to have spoken on the third division of the subject, "The Boy Out of School," I ut could not be present The afternoon session began with a period of singing under the leadership of C. B. Derman. Before the session closed, every seat in the hall was occu pied and many persons were obliged to stand. "Geography's Dry Bones Removed" yaa the topic of J. B. Hawker and which was illustrated with the stere optlcon by H. h. Uurdiek. Mr, Hawker said: The iroethoils of teadilng geonraphy adopted in some schools are not culeulated to impart much valunblo information nor to awaken real Interest In pupils. The memory is often rather taxed than dis ciplined, and the mind burdened with for mal answers rather than trained to tuku comprehensive and intelligent views of subjects. Names are learned and re peated, but no well defined and clear un derstanding of the localities and rela "GREAT CASH DEPARTMENT 1 Are now prepared to offer to the consumers of this county, at less than wholesale prices, the largest and most carefully selected stock of Dry Goods, Groceries, Hats and Caps, Furnishing Goods, Notions, Carpets and Draperies, Wall Paper and Window Shades, Ladies' Cloaks, Capes and Skirts, Boys' Clothing in Great Variety, Fresh Meat and Smoked Meats, Stylish Millinery, and every kind of goods required. We herewith give a few prices of staples that you can compare with prices that you are now paying.. A complete price list of staples in the various departments will be published each week and mailed to every consumer in the valley. It will pay you to visit our vast establishment, in the meantime, and ex amine the various lines of goods offered for sale and at prices astonishingly low. Below you will find the prices on a few staple articles, and for balance see our price list, published weekly : GROCERIES. Flour, Best Minnesota, Hard'Spring Wheat, Any Brand Desired Heal and Feed, per 100 pounds, . Best "Sugar Cured" Hams, . Best Side Bacon, . . 8 Bars of Best 5c. Soap, . . 1 Package, 5 pounds, Fairbank Gold Dust, Strictly Fresh Eggs, TODAY .. Balance in Grocery Department to correspond in with the above. We are offering today the most carefully selected stock of Ladies' Stylishlv Made Capes, Silk Waists and Ladies' Sicilian and Silk Skirts. They are Stylish and beautifully made. Call and examine. We will have in place by Friday one of the finest lines of Boys' and Youths' Clothing. You will there find just what you want and at prices to correspond with the low figures that prevail all through this vast establishment. We call especial attention to our Shoe Department. It is vast in its proportions and will astonish you in the low prices. We are busy marking our large incoming invoices from the most popular Eastern Shoe Manufacturers. We wish to call the attention of Builders and all in need of First Class Hardware that the elegant store rooms, lately vacated byrMr; John C. Swift, No. 314 Chestnut street, is to be occupied by us for Hardware pur poses, and will be stocked with a complete line of first-class goods. It is unnecessary to say further than that Mr. Charles F. Cauley, "a member of this firm," who is known as the most competent plumber and experienced tinsmith in this valley, will be in full management of this very im portant branch of. our business. Low estimates will be eivenl'to all who coritemolate building. Our motto is to lead in low orices and eood poods. laKe tne ouDuroan tive positions of different countries, to gether with the peculiarities of each Is acquired so that pupils frequently Irav school quite as Ignorant, so far aa relates to correct geographical knowledge, as they were when they commenced. There are plai-es, 1 bellev. where there Is too much indiscriminate use of the geography book in the school room. The habit of rushing through the geography or atlas learning a lenon one day, merely for recitation, and forgetting it the next, neither teacher nor pupils perceiving the value of the study is certainly very ob jectionable. Describing tno political di visions of Europe and Asia before the .po litical divisions of one's native state are known, learning the boundaries of Penn sylvania ere the pupil has sufficient prac tical senoe to describe the boundaries of the school house or the town in which he lives these and similar upsettings of nat ural order, may, indeed make a showy class may win praise from an undiscern lng visitor, but they surely do not give useful knowledge or discipline of mind to the learner. Is it strange there are dry bones in the teaching of geagraphy when the hundreds of happy ways in presenting its varied subjects are not resorted to by the teach er? Adhere strictly to the text of the book your geography Is cold and exceed ingly unpedagoglc, too. Separate it from tho study of history you have robbed it of half Its life. Supplement It with no books of travel you would destroy the locomotion and renown that footprints of Cooks and Livingstones combine. Com bine it with mispronunciation of geograph cal words and you have long ago ended your career as a successful teacher ot geography. The question may be asked, "What shall the teacher do to acquire the needed auxiliaries for the work'.'" Have vou no membership card from the public library? (let one. Have you no Scran ton city directory book with city map, or a Truth, Republican, Tribune or Times almunac on your desk? Clet them, if our worthy superintendent's recent list of questions has not necessitated them there ulready. , Have you no globe or alias or the world? Note the want on your requisition blank for supplies every quarter until the board of control shall hear you by your repealed calln Have vou no clay or sand molding table? Tho superintendent of repairs will make you one. Have you ever taken your class for a walk or outing farther than the school vard gate to the loot of the mountain, to its summit, to the mills, to the breaker, to the court house, to the beautiful parks? Do so, leaving till Inst your visit to tlio many parks, lest you be disappointed and return to your class room with a lecture prepared on "Fresh Air Kconomy." At last, renew your subscription for your educational Journal and then petition the school board for a magic lantern, pe tition hard; a "golden gato" awaits you. BEAT'TIFUL PENNSYLVANIA. Dr. J. T. Kothrock, the stnte forestry commissioner, gave an Illustrated ad dress on "Beautlf'tl Pennsylvania," the address delivered by him In this city several weeks ago under the auspices of the board of trade. It was an urgent appeal for the preservation by the state of Its woodland and a condemnation of the laws which permit the selling of woodlands for unpaid taxes and which grant charters to sporting clubs whose memberships are usually composed of non-resldcnts of the state. A scries of gracefully executed Greek statuary tableaux was given under the direction of Miss Anna E. Ktinkle, ot this city, a Shakespearean reciter of no little merit, and a graduate of the Philadelphia School of Oratory. The participants were Misses Eva Short, Grace Rose. Sarah A. Jones, Millie Wormser, Alice Evans, Anna Munson, Claudia Williams, May Monies, Ella Osland, Miss Durkln and Julia Pettl grew. Today's programme is as fol lows: WEDNESDAY, 9 A. M. Invocation. Music. A Knowledge of English Implies Whnt? Dr. Urumbaugh Reading, an Exact Science, .Miss McMollan Development of Civic Virtues in School, Professor Twltmeyer History Dr. Winship WEDXSEDAY, 2 P. M. Music. "Hcrburt" .' Dr. Do Garmo Children's Rights.. ..Professor Twltmeyer Great Commercial Routes, . Dr. Brumbaugh THE UNION CASH STORES OF T U 75 9y3 6y3 25 19 12 iar at scranton. it 1 ON PRACTICAL COMPOSITION How the Pablic Schools, Caa Make Better Writers. PRESENT FAULTS POINTED OUT Text of a Paper Bead by Livy S. Richard Before the City lastitate at Y. M. C. A. Ilall Yes- . terdai Forenoon. , The purpose of written language, I take it, should be to convey and not, as Talleyrand said, to conceal thought. In certain kinds of composition it is permissible to convey thought with fancy trimmings, as one sometimes garnishes the food that one places on one's table. . Thus In poetry, it is proper to put the thought in such a dress of language that It will delight the ear and please the sensibilities as well as appeal to the Intellect. The same Is true, to varying degree, with what newspaper workers none too rev-J erently call "fine writing, for an ex ample of which take some of Mr. Rus kln's elaborate prose. In which the sharp point of thought Is often Im bedded Inches deep In a sweet-smelling bouquet of words. Not every table, however, is able to afford garnishes with Its meat and po tatoes: and If all were, what would be the value of garnishes? For the most of us, certainly for the great majority of the pupils that come under your tuition In the schools of Scranton, the needed thing Is tp learn how to employ written words so ns to carry the thought straight and true from the thinker to the render, without any loss In transit. In these busy days, with a million new things crowding upon us from every direction, it Is not economi cal and it is not fair either to waste words nr to cause readers to waste time. The need of the da', especially In our Fchnols, Is for tho teaching of the most effective ordinary use of the English language, both in speech and in written discourse. Speaking theoretically and without experience whatsoever as a teacher of the young, I should say that the bane of most teaching of composition in the schools consists of this: That tho thing is gone at as if It were some for midable task requiring special qualifi cation and necessitating special awe. The pupil thus lifts his pen with nerves a-tlutter, reaches for his subject mat ter In a scared sort of way and evolves, with natural but needless pains, an artificial expression not unlike the pic ture of baby when first consciously posed before the mysterious camera. There is rarely that hnppy smile ns when baby is at play all unconscious ot tho "snap-shotter"; nature is made to look unnatural, stiff, primped up and awkward. The uppermost consid eration Is not the thing to be said, but the way of Its saying. The pupil loses sight of the subject in the manner of Its treatment; the kernel of truth is lost in the chaff which ought snugly and smoothly and without conscious effort to enclose it. These, I know, are generalities; I appeal to your mem ories as teachers for specific Instances in evidence. If the pupil be not scared by the for midable formalitv of the composition exercise, he may possibly be made vain by it. I have known meek boys and girls who, awny from pen nnd pa per, are fairly modest and bashful, yet who never reach the writing desk without being seized with great and gorgeous ambitions. Their quill does not content Itself with the prosy things of earth; it wants to ride the Btars. Fearlessly it sets forth, a regu lar Don Quixote of a quill, charging wildly at phantoms, and mayhap get ting sorely worsted, now and then, by Atlantic A Sheeting, 4-4, 5c. per yard or piece. Pacific Extra Sheeting, 4-4, 5 y2c. per yard or piece. Pecolet A Sheeting, 4-4, 4$c per yard, good value. Lock wood's Sheetings, 9-4, 17c. per yard. Lockwood's Sheetings, 10-4, 19c. per yard. . Nameless Sheeting, 10-4, 12c per yard, extra value. Fruit of the Loom Sheeting, 4-4, 7c. per yard, Hill Muslin Sheeting, 4-4, 6c. per yard. First Prize Sheeting, 4-4, 434c. per yard, very cheap. Best American Indigo Prints, 5c. per yard. Best Amoskeag Ginghams, 5c. per yard. Our line of Domestic Fabrics is large and prices are lower than ever. $3.85 Cents Cents Cents . Cents Cents Cents prices passes by our, vast stores, All purchasing the windmills of grammar, syntax and j rhetorical formula; but for all that sin cere, hopeful and impetuous. A writer of this stamp is a likely specimen. There are hopes for htm. He needs a friendly curb; a kindly trimming and pruning; a series of gentle but ideter mlned introductions to the inestimable guardian angel called common sense. Put sufficient weights on this sort of a writer to keep him down to the level ot ordinary, every-day human affairs; turn his enthusiasm for the beautiful children of his vlvldl fancy (into a saner relish for the equally beautiful truths of the real world of nature and of humanity which surrounds him, and you will be in a fair way to add something of value to the literature of your time; at least, you will get read able English. Sometimes teachers meet with a third kind of pupil which I trust is scarce in Scranton. This pupil Is neith er scared nor ambitious, but simply sullen. He either cannot write or will not; and for practical purposes the one condition is equivalent to the other. Upon such a pupil It is useless to waste much time. Better look to the willing ones. Some persons are fated to be literary ciphers. For all kinds of pupils at the begin ning of the composition' work I should recommend the divesting from the ex ercise of all unnecessary appearances of formality. I am not so sure that it Is a wise thing to try to teach a room ful of punlls to write in unison, at a certain time, always the same, day af ter dny. It seems to tie that this un varying routine begets in course of time a kind of stiff and stilted formal Ism In the writers, a mechanical tem per. If you please. Now of all things to be abhorred in composition, surely the mechanical temper Is the worst. When It gets to a point where one who writes feels that he has to write, bo much every day, or week, or yenr, whether there be in him anything worth placing on paper or not, then heaven pity, first that writer, and next his readers. Possibly I speak on this point with something of the bias of un usual experience unusual, I mean, to the pupils who attend the schools. The demands of dally newspaper work of ten necessitate what we call space filling; and when one's bread and but ter depends upon one's filling a fixed space, six days a week, be the mind dull or keen, there Is reached a condi tion of practical composition which, I take it. Is not within the limits of the preent discussion. The suggestion Is tenatlve; but I be lieve It would be worth while for each pupil to be made first to talk his thought on a given subject, before putting It to paper; and then asked to write it down Just as it was spoken, or very nearly so. This. I know, might be dif ficult to do In the school room, but In many cases It could be done by enlist ing the aid of the home. The advant age of this plan would be that the written message would not then come to be regarded aa something essentially different from the spoken message; nnd we should have compositions as plain and as understandable as talks are. When you say a thing you generally say It bo It is understood. The words tit naturally into place. They go as far as the idea goes, and no further; they do not leave the idea stranded. It should be the aim of the schools to get that kind of straightforward, lucid and sufficient thought-transference done with words written as well as by means of words spoken. Whatever methods or artifices will conduce to this end should be employed; whatever in terfere with this purpose should be dis carded. You, as practical teachers, should know better than I how tti find ways and means in your special and fa miliar department of work, I want to confess, at this potnt, that although something of a practical writ er myself In the sense of having a good deal of writing to do, such as it is I have never bothered my head much vsu-v DRY GOODS. about rules ot granunar or of rhetoric Not that those rules are bad things to know. The knowledge of them Is like the knowledge of the railway schedule when one wants to go on a Journey. It facilitates matters to know when the right train goes and how to get on the right train Instead ot the wrong one. But for all that, the train schedule should not be made the chief consider ation in traveling. It is, at best only a useful accessory. The paramount thing is to know where you want to go to and what you want to go for. Applying this homely simile to the writing ot English, I would suggest that it is well not to be too severe when the pupil mixes tenses or rhetorical figures; when he sprains the parts of speech or does unconscious violence to the shade of Llndley Murray. This, to be sure, Is a bad thing to do; but In the great day, when human accounts are bal anced for the Is't time, it will, I trust, be reckoned a venial sin compared with the writing of structurally proper sent ences which have In them only faint st'restlnns of a meaning, only the pale ghost ot a murdered idea. Let it never be forgotten that this Is an age when people like to get results. The teacher who finds favor with the knowing ones in a community is not necessarily the teacher who knows the most about the science ot pedagogy; about Pestalozzl, for example, who died years ago, or Colonel Parker, of "Quincy method" fame, who lives way out in Chicago; but the teacher who can take the crude pupil, let us say right here in Scranton, In his raw ma terial stage and with due diligence turn out a tolerably well finished product fit for the substantial duties and re sponsibilities of every-day life. Such a teacher is a jewel, be her method this, that or the other. Such a teacher does not teach composition on the principle that the boy must fit the boot; she tries to get a size of boot that will fit the boy; and she is careful, too, to see that the sharp pegs which the grammatical and rhetorical boot-makers are wont to leave sticking up through the soles are smoothed down so as not to maim tho foot and give the lad a wild desire to shake boots altogether and hoof it barefooted. By this time I trust you will see my point, that, when all Is said, the Idea is the thing:. Put that always first. Never let a pupil begin a composition until he knows what he wants to say. Discourage aimless writing. Do not let the Inexpert pen try to blaze a path as It goes along. There are enough mature cranks In tho world to supply all the necessary side cuts to beatitude or per dition. Keep the young literary trav eler on familiar ground. Don't let him feel that writing is a different function from talking; that It is not worth while to write down the things that one talks or that one hears; that, somehow, com position Is a strange thing, a thing: apart. Make it an easy, a familiar, an almost unconscious thing, a thing as easy, when there is something to be written, as It is easy to speak when there is something to be said. To be sure, cultivate originality; but I would not do much of that In special connection with composition exercises themselves. That should be a permanent aim, all the day long. That should be one of the solemn and everlasting missions of the teacher, twenty-four hours to the day and seven days to the week. In com position, when you get the pupil to the point where he can lift his pen to pa per without more ado than he would purse his lips to frame a spoken sent ence, the originality that is in him, that you, as teachers, are divinely commis sioned to nurture and develops in him, will come to tho front, in English that can be read without tax upon the read er's guessing faculty. And, now, a word about style. At some point or other In the progress of the pupil through the schools, the ques tion of style will probably present It self. If It does. Ignore It Above all things, don't try to cast the pupil's DUNRflORE, LIMITED, Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best Best from us will be allowed street car fare. manner of expression la a set mold. I repeat, let style alone. It Is physically given to no two ot the billions ot hu man beings upon the face of this earth to look precisely alike; and In much the same fashion It should be the sovereign privilege ot every one to lorm and cher ish his own literary style. Given the thought, the style will come. When ever you see a writer trying to force his words to fashion themselves on paper In a certain fixed way, after some par ticular model, classic or otherwise, you see an unfortunate, who deserves to be pitied. What la In a man will come out, not forced, according to formula, but spontaneously, of Its own sweet will, and the freer it is In coming the better it will be when It gets out. I have no patience with the teacher who thinks that style Is a thing of rote, rr that Shakespearea are to be made by putting diagrams on the blacxboard. If a pupil has a thing to say, let him choose the manner of its saying. How ever else you may feel in duty bound to bend his plastic mind to the stereotyped forms of the school room, I beg ot you allow him that one freedom, untram meled. Sorry, Indeed, are the samples of style-copying that reach the eye of the editor of literary manuscripts. Like a needle in the hay stack Is the contribu tion to the newspaper or the magazine which betokens fresh, honest, uncon scious originality in form no less than In substance of expression. Delicious to the wearied taste of the professional reader of manuscripts is the story, the poem, the essay or the descriptive piece which goes to its mark aa swift and straight and true and withal with as little fuss as the arrow that Is shot from the bow. When you put that kind of a manuscript before the editorial optic you make the heart glad. Yet such manuscripts ought not to be scarce. The gift of telling a thing on paper with as much brightness, spice and absence of self-consciousness aa one Is wont to tell it when speaking chattily with the tongue, ought not to be so rare aa It is. Perhaps some ot you read the letters from London which Miss Kaiser used to write for The Tribune. They were nothing much to brag of, according to formal standards. They probably took a good many more liberties with Goold Brown and Professor Hart than one would care to take if sending In an essay as an examination paper. But there was a charm about them that carried you along. You didn't stop to apply the measurements ot grammar and rhetoric and all that. You just gave yourself over to them and let syn tactical propriety go where It listed. Why? Because they were written Just like a clever, jolly young woman would rattle them oft If talking to a group of friends. That fine gift of being natural, of being easy, of being fluent without affectation or redundancy, in short, of writing English as If to write were no trick at all but simply the most matter-of-course thing In the world. Is what we' editors find to be scarcer among the graduates of our common schools than teeth in hen's mouths or white diamonds In culm dumps; and to a large degree we charge you with being responsible for the deficit. There was a time, many years ago, when our chief writers were school bred m.n. The era of the New England goup of Lowell, the finished scholar, critic and poet; of Emerson the trans cendent seer; of Whlttier, sweet bard of simple ways, to whom nature re vealed her beauties at first hand; of Longfellow, rich in human sympathy and ripe in classic lore; of Hawthorne, of Ripley, of Dana, of Thoreau this was a time when American letters took their inspiration from the universities; a time when not to have been a son of Ell or of Cambridge almost meant for feiture of one's literary birthright. I am not sure that I can give a sufficient reason for the fact that this condition no longer exists; but that it does not exist can be established by a very brief STORES." 1 FRESH MEAT DEPARTMENT. Porterhouse Steak, , Sirloin Steak, 2 2 Round Steak, I Choice Rib Roast, : Pork Sausage, . Kettle Rendered Lard, ? Chuck Roast, . . ; ' Home-made Bologna, ? Boiling Meat, . . Leg of Lamb, Stew of Lamb, Loins of Veal, Stew of Veal, Pork Chops, THIS DEPARTMENT WILL ALWAYS survey ot the field of contemporary let ters. Who are the men that today reach and grip the American ear? Are they college bred? Aa a rule, no. Howell. pernaps the roremost of our American writers of fiction, learned his trade of authorship in a country printing shoo, teamed it by dally practice with th tools of the writer's craft Bret Hart a. marx Twain. Walt Whitman. Joaquin Miller. Hamlin Garland. Eueena Field all these reached their level with small or no aid from the higher schools. iranK Stockton. Hopkinson Smith, Marion Crawford. Nelson Page. Robert Earr, and that young realist, Stephen Crane, gained their renown without debt to the pedagogues, mot of them by steady work In the literary tread mill. Whitcomb Riley had no schooling at all; Frank Stanton had little, and that promising genius cut off in hia bud. Richard Itea!r. owed the colleges nothing. Carry this Inquiry further h"n 1 here have time to, and you will rind that the same rule prevails. There are brilliant exceptions, of co"r8: in the cos of Bailer Aldrlch, Watson G. icier. Clatenc Stedman and some others of per haps less renown; but they prove rather than cancel the rule. I have no hesitancy whatever in expressing the belief that as matters now stand, the pupil who expects to become a practical, every-day writer, who ex pects to gain a livellhoood with the pen, either In pure literature or In the by-paths of Journalism, had better not run the risk of a college education, un-' less he take time somewhere between the beginning and the end ot his school period and the nearer to the beginning of it perhaps the better to acquire by practice a good working ttse of the Queen's English, so good that the mech anism of education will not afterward crush it and leave him, at graduation, -a helpless pedant In style. The trouble Is, as I have already sought to point out, that In the routine processes of the schooling, the very fundamental requisite of literary suc cess, that natural ease In the writing ot thought which makes the writing as natural a process as the thinking. Is neglected. This requisite may be In born in the few; and these can never be wholly spoiled. But In the great majority of us It has to be skilfully and patiently developed; and before you teachers in the public schools, who re ceive the future men and women ot our land In the first stages of their search for practical knowledge and In the very Infancy of their dormant cap abilities, Is the duty of so trulnlng the young Idea that It may write clean-, cut, straightforward, pleasurable Eng lish. HELPING MS FATHER-IN-LAW. "Son-in-law," he said, as he called him Into the library and locked the door, "you have lived with me now for over two. years." "Y-yes. Mr." "In all that time I haven't asked you at penny for board." "N-no, sir." "In all your little family quarrels 1 have always taken your part and decided in your favor." "A-always, sir." "I havo even paid some of your bllli." "Y-you have, sir." "And in every way helped you to get alonit." "Y-you have been very kind, sir." "I have tried to be, my boy, and I think! you appreciate It." "M do, sir." "Then the small favor I am going to asK will no doubt be granted." "It will, sir." "Thanks. Kindly tell your mofher-ln-law that the seat cheeks for the French ball, which she picked up In my room this morning, were dropped out of your pocket, and we'll call It square!" Truth. Alow sofa Philosopher. "Thirst Is a funny thing," said Dismal Dawson, looking dreamily through the windows of the barn loft at the floating clouds. "Too much of It kills a man, whilst Jist about the proper amount If it is about that makes life wortli llvln'."-. Indianapolis Journal. S . 12!iC. per pound 12c. per pound 10c. per pound 10c. 10c. 10c. 8c. 8c. per pound per pound per pound per pound per pound per pound 4c. 12c. per pound 8c. per pound I2y2c. per pound 8c. per pound . ? 10c. per pound BE KEPT UP TO DATQ convincing. P. J. HORAN, -Chairman. P. D. MAN LEY, Treasurer. JOHN E. SWIFT, (Secretary.