The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, April 28, 1904, Image 6

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    THE SONG OF £4N IT. “By St. Andrew's bones, Lord Ab- i ‘WHEN YOU GO TO THE 'ORLD’ [ qr TE I
EG PT bot!’ cried the king, “there is nol mw! gl |
{Somewhat after “Paddle Your Own Ca
noe.”
Of all the different kinds of men
And women that round us flit,
The ones that most tire and rouse our ire
Are they who would always be it.
In aff aj great or small or of no ’count at
They want to be the “whole thing”—
You can’t make ‘em shrink, nor let your-
self think—
And this is the song that they
“Oh. I'll love my neighbor as myse
If he will be good to me,
‘And I'll never sit down with a tear or a
frown
If this he will let me be,
Som
ie
Whether or not I'm ft,
I'll be nice and good and do as I should
! If I can always be it.
No one must fly quite so high as I,
If they do they may surely drop;
In social life or political strife
I want to be on the top
For can you not see it was born in me
To be leader and do things right?
Twas nature's design that I only should
shine
And squelch every other one’
0, I'll love my neighbor as myself,
"But this he must note, to wit:
That I won't play ball or do nothing at al]
Unless I'm the one to be it.
Unless I'm the one to be it.
That others can do, perhaps better, too,
The things that I do so w ell
Doesn 1 enter my head—why, I'd rather be
Thay at ride the top o the swell.
I will join with the others, friends, strang-
ers or brothers,
In striving to make a “hit,”
But they must not forget, nor even once let
This =r fom their minds—that I'm it,
tit,
O, I'm the Ey to fire the gun;
T am ever and always it.
It don’t worry me that the world may see
Many things that I seem to lack
The seat up in front is the one that I want
Let other folks go “way back.”
If a friend of mine takes a notion to shine
Or tries to show off a bi
Let it be understood, I shall eut him for
cood
Till he feels ashamed to be it.
Oh, I'll love my neighbor as myself,
Provided he has the wit
To not undertake to run his own wake—
Even then he must let me be it,
1t, it, it
one more fit—
1ck with the rest, for Iam the best
I all—to be always it.
—Hartford Times.
The Ghost
That Lanced
at Jeddart.
fe
203% HERE were gay and fes-
tive doings in abbey-
© crowned Jedburgh one fine
day in the year of grace
OY 1285—doings the like of
which the old-world village had never
seen before, nor equalled since. All was
stir and bustle, the clachan was full of:
men-at-arms and vassals, followers of
the great and powerful barons who,
in their turn followed their liege lord
the King; and he for some days before-
hand had taken up his quarters with-
in the precincts of the stately abbey.
Hither for days beforehand, too, had
been flocking all the vagrants, as w ell,
S014
as the nobles of the land. Pipers,
fiddlers, glee - maidens and harpers
jostled, elbow with elbow, haughty
knights, portly monks and high-born'
dames—each and all eager to take
their places in the pageant, or share
the spectacle arising out of good King
‘Alexander's wedding. Itor therein lay
the reason of all the bustle and un-
usual display in this old Border cla-
chan—XKing Alexander was that day
espousing the Lady Ioleat de Coney,
daughter of the noble Count of Dreux,
and all were eager to witness the cere-
mony, if not to share in the banquet
to be held that night in honor of the
occasion,
This Alexander was he who had
been surnamed “Tamer of the Ravens,”
and was at that time a man in the
prime of life—a man wise in the judg-
ment hall, fierce on the battlefield,
gentle in lady’s bower, and enthroned
in the hearts of his people—take him,
all in all, a king the like of whom
Scotland was destined to see but once
again. So, it was no wonder the peo-
ple crowded to share in the mirth and
jollity of the occasion, to wish him
long life, and hope the gentle queen on
his arm wonld long be enthron d in his
heart and theirs.
Meanwhile, the monks of the abbey
grumbled loud and long because the
king had bidden the villagers to at-
tend the banquet that night and help
on the dance. The lord abbot had sent
to countermand the order, bidding the
rustics, under pain of the displeasure
of Holy Church, to bide in their own
homes and refrain from indulging in
the sinful pleasure of dancing. But
this did not go down well with the
burghers, and Will, the Cauldron
Clouter, bold 2:3 a lion, walked into {he
king’s presence, where courtiers bowed |
at his knee and gentie ladies hung
about, to complain of the abbot’s in-
terference with their pleasure.
“By ma sang!” cried the good king
rising from his throne in displeasure,
~-+
and striding through the abbey hall
with the Stride of a warrior on the
battlefield, “this mauna be. Every one
has my leave to enjoy humsel, Tor
no’ every day a ki 3
‘tak’ your pleasure w
guid
1
a
s 0
sayin’.
| almost fo
in dancing and ye did wrong to Sp
say me in this. Hearken now,” he
continued, “to what I here ordain. Lei
all the waukers, and wabsters and sou.
tars, and merchants, and millers and
cedgers frae the kintra round that are
so minded set to at oice and dance a
recl te celebrate our waddin’. And
every landward lassie that so likes can
come the nicht—the bonnie lassie fresh
frae pu’in’ lint ‘ll be as well received
by us as ony haughty baron’s dochtar.
And tak’- tent that nae monk inter-
feres.” J
“Naught good can come of displeas:
ing Holy Church,” said the abbot,
turning away with a long lip; and the
courtiers were reminded of his words
later on that night.
So the town-crier
proclamation through the
the whole of the populace, from the
town-foot to the abbey, were soon gone
dancing mad—all dancing to the well-
being of the king.
The scene at the marriage feast that
night was something the burghers did
belied the king's
town, and
not forget in a hurry. The tables
stretched from one end of the hall
straight out into the caller air, and
zroaned beneath the generous fare pro-
vided from the private stores of loya
burgesses—bannocks and cheese, hag
gis and tripe, apples and pears, fish
and flesh, and every other dainty usu-
ally provided for a royal marriage,
with drink to match. Then When they
they had feasted to their heart's con-
tent, like a hailstorm through i) for-
est, the dance began; and lords and
ladies, with laughing eyes vowed, tired
or not, to keep it going till morning.
The fiddles went, and harpers played,
while guitars twanged accompaniment
to song from throats of bonnie lassies.
All took part in the entertainment,
and even bow-legged Tam the Tin-
man, who could neither dance nor
play nor sing, contributed to the din,
if not the music, by shouting at the
pitch of his leathern lungs, “Ilo Jed-
dart’s here!” the burg rallying cry.
When, lo! a change came oer the
scene, and. dancers broke off, awe-
stricken, musicians ceased their play-
ing, and singing girls became dumb.
A spell hung o'er them all, but still
the patter of a pair of brogues could
De heard carrying on the Dbroken-off
dance, though no one could be seen,
while the wail of an invisible bagpipe
playing the accompaniment was plain.
ly audible. The lad with the lang bas-
soon fainted, the kettle-drummers and
fifers followed suit, while the harpers
glowered auaking with terror through
the strings of their silent instruments,
and shut their eyes—on such a sight
that now appeared.
It was no human being, yet there it
was, dancing through the hall, eutting
such capers and performing such an-
ties that it nearly tumbled over the
Provost, worthy man, who stood in its
way. Then it jinked in the king's di
rection, and even jostled him with its
elbow s, to the no small dismay of the
of both sexes,. who fled
sereaming to the other end of the hall.
It had a plume of feathers on its
head, as if it had been a varon, while
its attenuated form was attired in a
kilt all embroidered. with goid bro-
cade, with a dainty doubjet adorned
with silver lacing to match. 3ut yet,
as I have said; it was:only a thing of
bones—an atomy, a skeleton, a sight
alike grotesque and Iudicrous—a ghost
in kilts! It lightly irad an niry minuet,
cracking its fies! and pre-
tending to link with unseen partners
Aown. fhe floor. It danced that night
as surely never before had country
dance been danced, grinning and beav-
ing at the same time to the Queen
and her ladies on the dais, who were
speechless with terror; and then, si-
lent as it had come, it flitted from the
palace, and the spell was broken. Then
by degrees came courage back to -the
t hearts of those assembled there.
Such is the legend of the ghost that
danced at- Jeddart, ‘a legend that is
historically true.—Glasgow . Herald,
Affinity of Meteori
A total of 634 meteorites was known
up to 1993, of which there were 182
irons and only seventy-feur stones in
the Western hemisphere, and: 299
stones and only seventy-nine irons in
the Eastern hemisphere. The records
show only the fall of 350 of these me-
teorites, dating back to the fifteenth
century. Professer Berwerth, of Vi-
enna, despite this small number of
known specimens, calculates that 990
meteorites must fall to the earth ech
-ear, not counting shooting stars that
disappear in the atmosphere, and that
fifty-five of these at least should come
under observation. Professor DBer-
werth finds that meteorites have been
chiefly recorded in civiiized countries,
but that in Any "instances they are
mere numercus in thinly settled dis-
and that they have an especial
for mountainous areas.—Phila-
Record.
tes For Mountains.
A Story of Mommsen.
One anccdote of Mommsen has been
rgoiten. He was elecied to
and the day he took his
an extraordinary scene,
speaking, Mom nm-
hed In a
ichstag,
tag
and
d
ocul
Bisn
stared.
top!”
So thereupor
and reprimanded him before the
court.
“What is this we
he inquired. “Is
whole
hear, Lord Abbo
it our wedd
thine that ye must needs turn the |
guests away from us?’
“Sire,” answered the a
with a
dancing is a lure of
it befits not these poor pe
astray by such a device.
obeisance
6 the
1 he sent for the abbot, | tl
Ss still in his class |
listen to his
not gulet : at once I shall
and he
Bearings 22
Gras
no Boe in St. Louis
Suggestions That, Should Be Helpful t,o the Stranger .
:: No Trouble When You Cet
The Greatest of the World's Expositions ®
a
Your -603- 608
——
self denijal
or
It will be worth all the
that one may practice
Years to see the World's
at St. Louis. Money saved, earned or
horrowed, cannot be better spent, than
in getting acquainted with the warld's
progress as revealed at this latest and
gr atc st of expositions,
not travel around the
note of w hat the nations are doing,
but the nations from all around the
world desire us to know and have sent
world .to
Tt means
growth of |
means, see the W orld’s Fair.
everything to your future
mind, to your present pleasure
life-long satisfaction. Who that. saw
the Centennial Exposition or the
Columbian Exposition that does not re-
vert to it with recollections of keenest |
pleasure?
Within the two square miles of the |
several | 1
Fair of 1904 |
All of ps. can. |
their best works to St. Louis to be
placed on display. a
Therefore, by all means or any |
“and | gine of 5000 horse-power,
|
|
| watts, the four
1
|
By MARK BENNITT
The historical e
jotives is one of the features. It
shows the development of seventy-five
years in locomotive construction.
| Strange indeed is the person who is
| not yet impressed with these evidences
| of man’s long struggle with the prob-
lem¥of rail transportation, tlie most civ-
ilizing of modern influences, next to the
newspaper, which must always stand
first. ‘To describe in detail this exhibit
would be a long story in itself.
Now let us cross the flower gardens
to the Palace of Machinery, just south
of Transportation. The huge power
| generators are the first things to ar-
nest the eye. The Allis-Chalmers en-
the Curtis
steam turbine of 8000 horse-power, the
Parsons steam turbine of 5000 kilo-
Westinghouse genera-
| tains.
tors of 3000 horse-power each, and
each as high as a house. And then
other and small of
xhibit of loco-|
generators great
a twelve-acre outdoor display in addi-
tion to the nine acres under roof.
The Palace of Art at the World's
Fair contains 195 galleries. Each gal-
lery is a large room, lighted from
above and filied with the choicest
works of all countries of the world in
which art has made noteworthy pro-
gress. The group of buildings to house
this magnificent display represents an
expenditure of more than $1,000,000.
Even to the timid traveler, St. Louis
presents no complications. It is all as
plain as a b ¢ when once you get your
bearings. The streets all run east and
west or north and south, with rarely
a confusing diagonal.
All trains into St. Louis arrive at
Union Station, one of the finest rail
road terminals in the world. The sta-
tion is on the south side of Market
street, between 18th and 20th streets,
so that when the visitor emerges from
the station he finds himself at the be
COR
R OF PALACE OF LIBERAL
FAIR, ST LOUIS.
Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St.
Louis there is more to he. seen than
ever was brought together in ten times
the space before. It is a great. coliee
tion of expositions massed into one.
It is nearly twice as large as ‘ihe
Columbian Exposition -at Chicago.
nearly ten times larger than the Pan
American Exposition at Juftalo.
Every exhibit palace offers
alent of .a splendid exposition,
covering many acres of space.
The largest of thiese is the Palace of
Agriculture, withifs twenty-three acres
under roof, and filled to the doo
the most wonderful agricuitural coi-
sion,
tions of the world: are
side great numbers of individual
hibitors. Five great staples have been
chosen for extraordinary display.
Corn, cotton, sugar, rice and tobacco
are here arrayed .as they have I
been before, and undreamed
ties are revealed to inquiring mi
Such a dairy display was never
tempted and such a collection of farm
machinery and tools was never placed
on exhibition.
The Palace of Transport
in size, covering fifteen 1
only hint at the wonders it re
eXxX-
POs
acres. IC
the equiv- |
|
each |
lection ever assembled upon any occa- |
i The important States and Na- |
all here adong- |
. | education
ar
ation is next
ARTS AT WORLD'S
| an kinds—the most wonderful display |
| of engines ever assembled. But these |
are not all. Think of ten acres of!
| glistening*machines of every kind and
| en have some idea of the contents of
e ‘Palace of Machinery.
We CTOSS” lagoon to the east-
ward and come to the beautiful Palace
of Electrici with eight acres of ex-
hihits from many countries, which
sliow the marvelous development of
| electrical science. To the nerth again
cover one‘of‘the arched bridges we ap-
proach the Palace of Varied Indus-
| fries, viewing wonderful grace and
| splendor a8 we go. Here are fourteen
res ‘of exhibits from all over the
word The Palace of Manufactures
| is the samesize and stands on the op-
| posite side of the Plaza of St. Louis.
| It is equally interesting in the variety
| and newness of its contents.
Opposite the Palace of Manufactures
to the southward is the Palace of Edu-
cation, this being the first time that
been allotted a great
g all its own” A "variety of
v ses n are the feature
acre display. The
in the eastern part
group are Mines and Met-
Liberal Arts. The De-
ent of Mines and Metallurgy has
+1;
Lie
has
build
two
ginning of the city numbering both
worth and south and eighteen blocks
from the river.
Standing on Market street with his
back to the station the down-town or
main business section of the city
is to his right about one mile. The
World's Fair is to his left, westward
about five miles. All the street cars
are so labeled that he may easily know
which cars to take.
Practically all St. Louis will be a
lodging house during the Exposition.
The. hotels have greatly multiplied in
number and thousands of private
homes are open for the accommoda-
tion of guests. The rates at the hotels
are generally on the European plan
as it will be more convenient for
guests to get (heir meals wherever
meal-time may find them. Prices for
rooms in private houses range from
50 cents to $2.50 per day per person.
The prevailing rate is $1.00 per person
and in nearly every case good acconi-
modations with all conveniences and
in good localities may be had for this
price. The higher rate presupposes
larger rooms and more luxurious quar-
ters. But no one need pay more than
£1 00.
The hotel prices have a wide range,
Competition will be brisk.
ELECTHICITY IN JAPAN,
Tp
Activity of the Island Empire in Con-
struction Work.
That the modern Japanese are de-
termined to keep abreast of the peo-
ples of the Western world is shown
not only by their quick
art of war, but also by their
to appropriate all the results of mod-
ern According to
the London 1 ]
are now displaying much activity in
the utilization of electricity for t
ing, power and traction purposes. i
Tokio electric light Lave
in operation for a considerable
and it has become necessary to
extend the power
present has a capac
power, and this is being
an additi
new plant will go into operation
ing the present month, and work
readiness
discovery.
Electrica
scientific
works
E5050
1sed
inere:
ional 3600 horse power.
then be commenced on a further
tension, which will ultitnately incre:
the station by 16,000
Fresh demands for
: made on
1e railwa
x an extensive
ways in Tokio.
the output of
Liorse power.
tric power are be
trie compan;
which is opera
tem of light rai
The Dardanelles.
The question w
right to h
olec-
the elec:
Sy s-
send he Black
through the Durda inelles is based upon
a treaty executed in 1841 between the
five great Powers, whereby it was
agreed that no belonging to any
nation should pass
through rithout the con-
sent of
reaffirme
executed
in the
Turkey.
d by the
after the
70s.
mastery. of the |
horse |
¥ company,
A CHANGE Cr
It Proves Beneficial When
son is Ailing.
the balance of perfect
body so complex as man’s,
circulatary, - respiratory,
ula nervous systems inter-
£0 much upon one another, there
d of very frequent adjustment,
ially in busy age as
AIR.
Why a Per-
ilar and
such ‘a
ier Scope for itis
'k. The various organs
very really rested by
diet, cooking, water,
people and amuse-
monotonous
s them as it tries
of work is actual re-
have manifested
the seashore
stimulant, mountain
property, a sandy
Iryness or a sea voy
n will be
what would
us illness.
ge
‘hole syster
d off
otherwise spell seric
igorate t
calculated to
Man’s Nerve Impulses.
nerve
impulses in man
*k, In a recent
{1s si:
paper be
I
ore the London
meters
Royal So-
(216 feet) a
M'ch-
ars ago si ed it
T'S, br. Gowers,
remarks tha
either Dr. Michael Foster or Dr. Al-
widely wrong, or :
has become great
Cl
Seq ond. iments of Bir
10W
to be thirty
| the eminent logist,
ring the last fifteen years.
| asked.
for a|
j cover.”
AN ORGAN _ WITHOUT STOPS,
That Was the Opinion of the Man With
a Musicless Soul,
There is a man living in an Eley-
enth street flat who has no music in
his soul, and there is a man on the
lower floor whose soul is full of it.
The lower floor man not long ago add-
ed a four lung parlor organ to his lares
and penates, and two healthy daugh-
ters of his began to practice on it
Several nights later a friend paid a
Visit to the first man,
he got
the
floor.
“Fine toned
said, because 1
in his soul.
The musicless
“Whose
De and as soon as
lnside the apartment he heard
parlor ¢rgan on the lower
instrument that,” he
le, too, had some music
man grunted.
make is it 7” the
visitor
“Don’t know,” was
1 z » Was the ungracic
answer, > a
“How many stops has it”
The host pulled himself
up
powerful effort.
for a
hoy “Well,” he replied
it's been in the house for about a
week now, and in that time it hasn’t
had any that I have bed ‘n able to dis-
—New York P 3
Happy When They Are in Jail.
“Many a prisoner as soon as he steps
in the outer office,” said a C : :
street jail officer,
ton Record,
chair
accordix
“throws hi
with a si relief
th of
‘This is the first hap
PY hour in many
months. This is especiall true of
men charged with Ia irge embezzle-
ments. Their consciences seem to be
on the verge of collapse until
rive under the shadow of tl
they then see their
they ar-
1e ¢ Jail, When
future clear ly.’
AIELLO IS HANGED.
Young Italian Pays the Death Pen-
alty in the Brookville Jail—Few
Witness Execution.
John Batiste Aiello paid the death
penalty in the Brookville jail. Sheriff
Walter Curry had personal charge of
the execution, which took place on
the scaffold on which Michael Mal-
lone was executed on Kebruary 23.
The hanging tock place in the pres-
ence of a limited number of news-
paper mex, a few deputies, three phy-
sicians and a few friends of the sheriff.
Fathers Devilla, of Walston, and Win-
ker, of Brookville, were with the con-
demned man until a late hour the
night before, and again in the morn-
ing, the former accompanying him to
the scaffold. Aiello was convicted of
the killing of Frank Carfo at Punxsu-
tawney last summer. He was to have
been executed on January 23, but se=
cured two respites, and a strong effort
was made to save his life.
Godfrey C. Carner, a well-known cit-
izen of Sharpsville, is dead at the age
of 76. He was born in Pymatuning
township and his grandfather, God-
frey Carner, was a Revolutionary sol-
dier. Deceased was elected to Sharps-
ville’s first council in 1874 and held
other offices in that borough. At one
time he worked as boatman on 'the
Erie and Beaver canal and was the
first conductor on the Sharpsville rail-
road, now owned by the Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad Company. Iie leaves a
widow and four children.
A three-year-old child of Mrs. Ober-
land, of Sharpsburg, died at the resi-
dence of Mrs. Frank Sheline in Free-
port, from strychnia poisoning. The
child found a box filled with the dead-
ly tablets while playing about the
house of a neighbor, who for years has
been afflicted with heart disease, and
always keeps strychnia.
All the Greenville druggists, except
C. D. Alendorfer were accused be-
fore the Grand Jury with selling liquor
unlawfully. A detective named Crav-
ers furnished the ‘information, and he
is supposed to be backed by the Anti-
Saloon league. The information cites
many prominent citizens as patrons of
the drug stores,
Chief of Police Roney, of DuBois, ar-
rested Samuel] Clark on the charge of
securing $75 on a forged note at the
Falls Cieek National bank. The name
of Adam Hoag, a well-known business
man of DuBois is said to have been
used. Clarke has been taken to the
county jail at Brookville
Punxsutawney was recently made
the headquarters of the Young Men's
Christian association for the district,
which comprises Jefferson and part of
Clearfield, Indiana and Clarion coun-
ties. F. A. Rodle, of Cleveland, vecent-
ly appointed field secretary, will direct
the work of the organization.
Flijah McClelland, 45 years old, of
Youngwood, slipped and fell in alight-
ing from a Pittsburg and Lake Erie
railroad passenger train at Monaca,
and had his leg crushed so badly that
it was amputated at the hospital at
New Brighton, where Mr. McClelland
was removed.
The Graceton coke works, the larg-
est of the kind in Indiana county, will
resume operationg -about May 1, after
a shutdown of four months. Between
400 and 500 men will be given employ-
ment when all departments of the
plant are put into operation.
The hardware store of J. F. Howe at
Freedom was entered by thieves and
a large amount of goods, including re-
volvers, razors and watches were
stolen. The club house of the William
Penn club was also broken into, but
no articles were taken.
Samuel Brany, an employe of the
Bessemer coke works at Masontown,
died from burns in the hospital at
Uniontown. Braney is said to have
been dozing befcre a bonfire of logs,
his clothes being ignited while asleep.
After investigating charges of im-
proper conduct, made against Rev. P.
J. Chilicote, pastor of the Manorville
Methodist Episcopal church, the board
of officers of the church has issued a
report completely exoncrating him.
The New Castle Traction company
voluntarily reduced the price of street
car fares. For 50 cents 11 tickets will
Be sold. School children will got a
three-cent fare.
Sixty catchers at the Sharon tin
mill struck against a reduction in
wages. The plant is tied up and 1,-
000 men are idle. The mill had just
started full turn.
Three Italians were drowned by the
upsetting of a boat in the Conemaugh
river at Johnstown. One of the bodies
has been recovered.
John M. Buchanan, of the Beaver
county bar, has been removed 10
Mt. Clemens, Mich. tc undergo treat-
ment for rheumatism.
Rev. W. O. Laub, pastor of St.
John’s Lutheran church, at Freeport,
has resigned to accept a call to a
church at Reading.
The plant &f the Washington Car-
bon company, at Washington, it is an-
nounced is to be removed to Clarks-
burg, W. Va.
R. W. Isande, about 35 years old,
as killed by a train at Monessen. He
is supposed to have thrown himself
in front of the cars.
Thomas Prescott,
years old, had his
a miner, about 34
back and leg broken
by a Iall of slate in a mine near
Monongahela.
James Lewis, 13 years old, was in-
stantly killed by being
machinery of a tin
South Sharon.
A barn and several
belonging to W. H. Andrews,
Titusville, were destroyed by
Sixty-three head of cattle perist
caught in the
plate plant at
large buildings
the flan The is estimated at
about $10 0 600,
Joseph Coyle
Armstrong
son Rey
valley
Burg bbed the Wampum Posy
office, but secured little plunds 3
did not get fe ned, but
the mail and letters.
A SEI
t
A DISCO!
A Patriot
der Je
gregat
Spirit
manuel C
an addres
mate Am
the Natio
LD Itis ac
ing that
ates in th
movement
according
evolutioni
life and p
ations, ha
human be
mentary €
struggles «
The stude
hears the
vailings 0
ies, and |}
as he beh
is, W here
what just
race? Th
tion is th
nations to
and the sf
tion in th
the fact tl
trils the t
a living s
the blood
gray daw
breathe a
wise be «
the gropi
ants for r
acy.
The Ar
first men
motives t
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marking
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no nation
furnish s
motive in
limbs of t
had to de
able alien
America f
a depend
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outcome «
ests of hu
to effect
and empl
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when the
clearly th
universal
tlement o
cratic Am
world, fo
est type
type, and
ing with t
with great
The resul
the new .
She will :
question
the questi
cation mo
the relat
America i
problems
that she s
task.
In view
strike us
our count
service th
ment of. |
existence
the super
stitutions
Neverthe]
most nec
future lea
Where
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institutio
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ganized Té
our synag
their mis:
ligious cc
other plac
tum, in t}
and the b
8ClOUSNECSS
its form,
antee of t
gazed upc
and listen
The religi
ican pre-
many pha
strikingly
new poii
There are
concede t
nishes ar
righteous
the news]
tinct tren
liness.
The tr
ent conte
reconcile
the Unite
journals
even this
an evider
ious pape:
degenerat
degenerat
nominatic
ship of ‘e:
patience
truth.
throwing
the adopt
great ‘se
ious pape
in name
of these
newspape
paper, m
freshness.
other hai
increasing
American
Journalist
of the re
ent to all
of journ:
type. A
when we
cies of p
cation ha
ing of th
of our i
Americar
the Ame
foreign 7
to their ¢
iy of
ight to
forciz gn t
archy
sionary
in Ameri
fac