fREfMHD TRIBUNE. EBTABLISIIKI) l BHB. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, BY THE TRIEUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE; MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE, LOHO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES FREELAXD.— I'he TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freeiand at tlio ruts of I'JHi cents por month, payable every two month 9, or $l5O a year, payable in advance Tho TRIBUNE may be ordered direct form the carriers or from tho office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will re ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL —The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of. town subscribers for $1.5:) a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the aubncription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must bo made at the expiration, other wise tho subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofflce at Freeiand. Pa„ as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks. etl. t payibls to the Tribune I'rinting Company, Limited. Persistence brings success. No doubt some town will eventually get up an exposition that pays expenses. The United States by paying off its own debts and lending money to Eu rope makes it plain that prosperity aj a national proposition is no myth. Justice might do better service In some parts of the United States if the bandage were removed from her eyes and a modern weapon substitut ed for the Roman sword. The saio rule to guard against mala ria is to slap at every mosquito that comes along, without waiting to deter mine whether it is an anopheles or a culex. There is as yet no society for the protection of the common punc turer. In 1888 the first law adopting the Australian system of voting was passed in Kentucky, and by IS9B the Austra lian system had come into force by legislative action in every state of the country, except North Caiolina and South Carolina. The Chinese residents of the coun try are evidently taking to heart the old slogan "The Chinese must go," for they have "gone" to the number of 29,000 in the last 20 years, and we now have less than 90,000 of them. When the Chinaman makes his little for tune he goes back to China to live as a nabob among his people, and this ac counts for the decrease. A new theory concerning the In crease of appendicitis attributes it to worms or microbes swallowed by the patient when eating raw fruit. Old school physicians and surgeons sling, however, to the opinion that most of the alleged case 3 are fictitious and the product of imaginative young practi tioners who desire an opportunity to display a little surgical skill at the expenso of the patient. A Paris schoolmaster has petitioned the French chamber against kings still being portrayed on French play ing cards. Ho suggests that kings should be replaced by pictures of Thiers, MacMahon, Grevy and Carnot, and queens by equally prominent re publican women. The parliamentary commission sitting on the petition has replied that tho change is impossible, fincc it would ruin quite a number of playing card factories. "Blind Tom," who was the musical prodigy of the last generation, has re appeared in concert at the age of 62 years. He is the same mental imbe cile as of old, and since retiring from the stage has spent his days in asy lums and sanitariums, but his musi cal powers are said to he unimpaired. He can still play three airs at once, play with his back to the piano, and immediately reproduce any air which he hears. He is a human freak, unex plained and unexplainable. Human Frey of Wild Animals. The report of the government of In dia for 1899 shows that for that year 25,587 human lives fe'l a prey to wild animals. By far the largest number — 24,021 —were killed by snakes. Tigers were responsible for 899 deaths, wolves for 338, leopards 325 and 1,402 were killed by elephants, hyenas, jackals, and crocodiles together. The deaths due to serpents were much more nu merous than during preceding years. Pope <f;ets /lis Snuff In AmorVa. Pope Leo XIII. is still addicted tc the habit of taking snuff. It is not generally known that the snuff usee! by the head of the Roman Catholic church is made especially for his use in America. This particular kind is the highest priced made anywhere in the WOT Id. arid before being packed is Savored with tho costly attar of roses. Prussia's recent action In making all railway return tickets valid 45 days has been promptly followed by fiaxouy and Baden. I THE FALL OF A SEA-MONARCH. £ Br FRANK T. BCLT.ES. Glorious in all his splendid majesty, the great sun issued forth of his chamber, and all the wild sea basked in his beams with a million, million smiles. Save the sea and the sun and the sky, there was nought apparently existing—it might well have been the birthday of Light The one prevail ing characteristic of the scene to a human eye, had one been there to see, was peace—perfect, stainless peace. Yet beneath that sea of smiling, placid beauty a war of unending ferocity was being waged, truceless, merciless; for unto the victors belonged the spoils, and without them they must perish—there was none other food to be gotten. But besides all this ruthless war fare, carried on Inevitably, because without it all must die of hunger, there were other causes of conflict, matters of high policy and more in tricate motive than just the blind, all compelling pressure of hunger. The glowing surface of that morning 3ea was suddenly disturbed simultaneous ly at many points, and like ascending incense the bushy breathings of some scores of whales became visible. Per fectly at their ease, since their in stincts assured them that from this silent sea their only enemy was ab sent, they lay in unstudied grace about the sparkling waters, the cows and youngsters frivoling happily to gether in perfect freedom from care. Hither they had come from one of their richest feeding grounds, where ail had laid in a stock of energy suf ficient to carry them half around the globe without weariness. So they were fat with a great richness, strong with incalculable strength, and be cause of these things they were now about to settle a most momentous question. Apart from the main gathering of females and calves by the space of about a mile lay five individuals, who from their enormous superiority in size, no less than the staid gravity of their demeanor, wero evidently the adult males of the school. They lay almost motionless In the figure of a baseless triangle, whereof the apex was a magnificent bull over 70 feet in length, with a back like some keel less ship, bottom up, and a head huge and square as a railway car. He It was who first broke the stillness that reigned. Slowly raising his awful front with Its down-hanging 20-foot lower jaw exposing two gleaming rows of curved teeth, he said; "Children, ye have chosen the time and the place for your impeachment of my over-lordship, and I am ready. Well I wot that ye do but as our changeless laws decree; that the choice of your actions rest not with your selves; that although yo feel lords of yourselves and desirous of ruling all your fellows, it is but under the compelling pressure of our hereditary Instincts. Yet remember, I pray you, before ye combine to drive me from among ye, for how many generations 1 have led the school, how wisely I have chosen our paths, so that we are still an unbroken family, as we have been for more than a hundred sea sons. And if ye must bring your powers to test now, remember, too, that I am no weakling, no dotard weary of rule, but mightiest among all our people, conquerer In more than a thousand battles, wise with the ac cumulated knowledge of a hundred generations of monarchy. Certainly the day of my displacement must come; who should know that better than I? But methinks It has not yet dawned, and I would not have ye lightly pit your immature strength against mine, courting inevitable de struction. Ponder well my words, for I have spoken." A solemn hush ensued, just empha sized by the slumbrous sound of tlio spnrkling wavelets lapping ' those mighty forms as they lay all motion less and apparently inert. \ r et it had been easy to see that along each bas tion-like flank tho rolling tendons, each one a cable in itself, were tense and ready for instantaneous action, that the great muscle mounds wero hardened around the gigantic masses of bone, and that the flukes, each some hundred feet in area, did not yield to the heaving bosom of the swell, but showed an almost imperceptiblo vi bration as of a fucus frond in a tide rip. After a perfect silence of some 15 minutes an answer came—from the youngest of the group, who lay re mote from the chief: "We have heard, 0 king, the words of wisdom and our hearts rejoice. Truly wo have been of tho fortunate in this goodly realm, and ingrates in deed should we be had our training under so terrible a champion been wasted upon us. But therefore it is that we would forestall the shame that should overtake us did wo wait until thy force had waned and that all-conquering might had dwindled into dotage ere we essayed to put. thy teaching into practice. Since thy dep osition from this proud place must be, to whose forces couldst thou more honorably yield than to ours, the young warriors who have learned of thee all we know, and who will carry on the magnificent traditions thou hast handed down to us in a manner worthy of our splendid, sire. And if we be slain, as well may be, remembering with whom we do battle, tho greater our glory, the greater thine also." A deep murmur like the bursting of a tidal wave against the sea-worn lava rocks of Ascension marked the satisfaction of the group at this expo sition of their views, and as if actu ated by one set of nerves the colos sal four swung round shoulder to shoulder, and faced the ocean mon arch. Moving not by a barnacle's breadth, he answered, "It is well spoken, oh, my children; ye are wiser than I. And bo the issue what it will, all shall know that the royal race still holds. As in the days when our fathers met and slew the slimy dragons of the pit, and unscarred by fathom long claws or ten-ply coats of mail dashed them in pieces and chased them from the blue deep they be ioulde, so today when the world has grown old. and our ancient heritage has sorely shrunken, our warfare shall be the mightiest among created things." Hardly had the leviathan uttered the last word when, with a roar like Niagara bursting its bonds in spring, ho hurled his vast bulk headlong upon the close-gathered band of his huge offspring. His body was like a bent bow, and its recoil tore the amazed sea into deep whirls and eddies as if an island had foundered. Full upon the foremost one he fell, and deep an swered unto deep with tho impact. That awful blow dashed its recipient far into the soundless depths, where the champion sped swiftly forward on his course, unable to turn until his impetus was somewhat spent. Before he could again face his foes, the three were upon him, smiting him with Ti tanic fluke strokes, circling beneath him with intent to catch tho down hanging shaft of his lower jaw, rising swiftly, end on, beneath the broad spread of his belly, leaping high into the bright air, and falling heavily up on his wide back. The tormented sea foamed and hissed in angry protest, screaming sea birds circled around the conflict, rav ening sharks gathered from unknown distances, scenting blood, and all the countless tribes of ocean watted aghast. But after the first red fury had passed came the wariness, camo the fruitage of all those years of train ing, all the accumulated instincts of ages to supplement blind brutal force with deep-laid schemes of attack and defence. As yet the three survivors were but slightly injured, for they had so divided their attack, even in that first great onset, that the old warrior could not safely single out one for destruction. Now the young est, the spokesman, glided to the front of his brethren and faced his waiting sire: "What! so soon weary? Thou art older than we thought. Truly, this battle hath been delayed too long. We looked for a fight that should be re membered for many generations, and behoiu—■'* Out of the corner of his eye he saw tho foam circles rise as the vast tail of the chief curved inward for the spring, and he, the scoruer, launched himself backwards a Hun dred fathoms at a bound. After him, leaping like any salmon in a spate, came the terrible oldwarrier, the smit ten waves boiling around him as he dashed them aside in his tremendous pursuit But herein the pursued had the advantage, for it is a peculiarity of the sperm whale that, while he cannot see before him, his best arc of vision is right astern. So that tho pursuer must needs be guided by sound and the feel of the water, and tuo very vigor of his chase was telling far more upon his vast hulk than up on the lither form of his flying ene my. In this matter the monarch's wis dom was of no avail, for experience could not tell him how advancing age handicaps the strongest, and he won dered to find a numbness creeping along his spine—to feel that he was growing weary. And suddenly, with an eel-llko movement, tho pursued one described a circle beneath the water, rising swiftly, as a dolphin springs towards his pursuer, and dash ing at the dangling, gleaming jaw. These two great jaws met in clashing contest, breaking off a dozen or so ot the huge teeth and ripping eight or ten feet of the gristly muscle from the throat ot the aggressor. But hard ly had they swung clear of each other than the other two were fresh upon the scene, and while the youngest one rested, they effectually combined to prevent their fast-weakening foe from rising to breathe. No need now for them to do more, for the late enor mous expe-nditure of force had so drained his vast body of its prime ne cessity that the issue of the fight was but a question of minutes. Yet he still fought gallantly, though with lungs utterly empty—all the rushing torrent of his blood growing fetid for lack of vitalizing air. At last, with a roar as of a cyclone tnrough his head, he turned on his side and yielded to his triumphant conquerors, who drew off and allowed him to rise limply to the now quiet sea surface For more than an hour he lay there prone, enduring all the agony of 1113 overthrow, and seeing for before him the long, lonely vista of his solitary wanderings, a lone whale driven from his own, and nev ermore to rule again. Meanwhile, the three had departed in search of their brother, smitten so sorely early in the fight that he had not since joined them. When they found that which had been he. It was the centre of an innumerable host of hungry things that fled to air or sea depths t their approach. A glance revealed the manner of his end—a broken back—while already, such had been the energy of the sea people, the great framework of his ribs was partly laid bare. They made no regrets tor the doing of useless things finds no place In their scheme of things. Then the younger said: "So the question of overlordship lies between us three, and I am unwilling that it should await settlement. I claim the leader ship and am prepared here and now to maintain my right." This bold as sertion had its effect upon the two hearers, who, after a long pause, re plied: "We accept, O king, fully and freely, until the next battle day ar rives, when the succession must be maintained by thee in ancient form." So the matter was settled and proud ly, the young monarch set off to re join the waiting school. Into their midst he glided with an air of con scious majesty, pausing in the centre to receive the homage and affection ate caresses of the harem. No ques tions were asked as to the wherea bouts of the deposed sovereign, nor as to what had become of the missing member of the brotherhood. These aro things that do not disturb the whale people, who in truth have a sufficiency of other matters to occupy their thoughts besides those inevitable changes that belong to the settled or der of things. The recognit'on com plete, the new leader glided out from the midst of his people, and pointing his massive front to the westward moved off at a stately pace, on a straight course for tha coast of Japan. Long, long lay the defeated one, liovionless and alone. His exertions had been so tremendous that every vast muscle band seemed strained be yond recovery, while the torrent: of his blood, befouled by his long en forced stay beneath the sea, did not readily regain its normally liealthfuL flow. But on the second day he roused himself, and his mighty head swept the unbroken circle of the hori zon to satisfy himself that he was in deed at last a lone whale. Ending his earnest scrutiny, he milled round to the southward, and with set pur pose and steady fluke beat started for the Aucklands. On his journey he passed many a school or smaller "pod" of his kind, but in some mys terious manner the seal of his lone liness was set upon him, so that he was shunned by all. In 10 days he reached his objective, 10 days of fast ing, and Impelled by fierce hunger he ventured in closely to the cliffs, where great shoals of fish, many seals, with an occasional porpoise, came gai ly careering down the wide gaping tunnel of his throat into the inner darkness of dissolution. It was good to be here, pleasant to feel once more that unquestioned superiority over all things, and swittly the remembrance of his fall faded from the monster's mind. By day he wandered lazily, en joying tho constant easy procession of living food down his ever-opened gullet; by night he wallowed sleepily in the surf-torn margin of those jagged reefs. And thus he came to enjoy the new phase of existence, until one day he rose slowly from a favorite reef patch to feel a sharp pang shoot through his wide flank. Startled into sudden, violent activity, he plunged madly around In tho confined area of tho cove wherein he lay, in the vain en deavor to rid himself of the smart. But he had been taken at a disadvan tage, for in such shallow waters thers was no room to manoeuvre his vast hula, and his wary assailants felt that in spite of his undoubted vigor and ferocity he would be an easy prey. But suddenly he headed in stinctively for the open sea at such tremendous speed that tho two boats attached to him were hut as chips behind. He reached the harbor's mouth, and bending swiftly sought tho depths. Unfortunately for him a large pinnacle of rock rose sheer from the sea bed some hundred fath oms below, and from this he hurled himself headlong with such fearful force that his massive neck was brok en. And next day a weary company of men were toiling painfully to strip from his body it 3 great accumulation of valuable oil, and his long career was ended.—New York Evening Post How to Eiitor l'olltic*. If you want to be a politician, the first thing to do is to get into the push, or at least create tho impression that you are in. When there is a conven tion, if you can't work in as a dele gate, you can at least get into the crowd in the hotel lobby, and if you carry ourself in shape you can mako the stranger who is within the gates of the city believe you are not only a dele gate, but one of the steering commit tee. Keep busy. Take at least eight or ten men off to one side in the course of the evening for private conversation. There is quite a good deal In making people believe you are cutting a good many lemons, whether you are or not. It is a good idea to be seen often on the corner talking with some promi nent candidate. You can arrange this if you have the proper amount of gall. You may not have anything to tell him, but then you will be seen in con sultation, and you will make some par ties who don't know you very well think that there must be a hen on. But, above all else, cultivate your gall. If you can get some reporter to inter view you on the political situation, that will bo a good scheme. The news papers can make a reputation fcr al most any sort of a man.—Topeka Mail and Breeze. An Otn'lU Anion? Krtlnnl ri-iTilm-n. An oculist who has examined the eyes of pupils in five of the Jersey City public schools has found that one-sixth of the children have defec e vision- THE SWAMP SINCER. List to bis voice— Ker-rank! ker-ohunk ! As he sings in the lowland sedges. List to the plunge of his dart-like lunge As he dives where the cress-meed dredges; The fox-ilre glows in the misty gray Of the home of the singer chilly, TVhuse pop-eyes peep in u furtive way From tho breast of a white pond lily. List to hfs voice— Ker-runk! ker-chunk! As he sits on the bank a dreaming. List to the splash as his sleek legs dash To the depths where the llsh are gleaminß; The sunbeams creep through the leafy gloam Or the nook of the singer chilly. Whose pnp-e\ es peep from his island home, Tho brcust of a white point lily. —Boston Courier. HUMOROUS. First fly—l was shut up in a fly paper trap ull night. Second fly—Well, you needn't feel so stuck up about it. Nell—Young Mr. Sappehedde has quite a vein of sentiment in him. Belle —I'm afraid liis sentiment is all In vain. Siliicus—Woman is a riddle. She keeps us guessing. Cynicus—And yet we would rather be kept guessing than give her up. Waiter (who has upset a bowl of soup down the old gentleman's back) —Not a word, sir; not a word; my fault entirely. Tommy—Pop. what Is a cynic? Tommy's Pop—A cynic, my son. Is usually a man who has to put up with his wife's cooking. Muggins—That fellow Scribbler Is a wide-awake author. Buggins—What has he written? Muggins—His last work Is a treatise on Insomnia. Hubbubs —Do you have many through trains here? Subbubs —Yes, most of them are through trains. Tlicy go right through here without stop ping. Mr. Pitt —It Is odd that the lecturer's motto and the highwayman's motto are the same. Mr. Penn—What Is their motto? Mr. Pitt —Stand and de liver. First Actor—What's the latest? Second Actor—l'm told they're going to dramatize the hooks of that bank cashier who lately defaulted lor ?!,- 000,000. B'.obbs—That girl next door thumps the piano ad day and all night. She ought to bo locked up. Slobbs— Wouldn't it do just as well to have the piano locked up? Mr. Newlywed—These pies are not like mother used to make. Mrs. Newlyv.ed—Also permit me to remind you that you don't make the dough that father used to make. Tecs—l met Mies Lo Fevre in Paris. She said she knew you. Jess —Oh, yes. I learned French under her; did she tell you? Tess —No; she said you used to take lessons from her. First Little Girl—My dolly can say 'Mamma' and 'Papa.' Second Little Girl—Oh, that's so old-fashioned. It is proper now for children to address their parents as Mother and Father. Guest—You say this is the smallest room you have. How much is it? Summer Hotel Proprietor—Seven dol lars a day. Guest —And when I am through with it may I take it home with me as a souvenir? Irate Customer—l've brought this parrot back. You told me its former master had taught it to talk, and it does nothing but sit all day and wiggio its toes. Dealer—That's all right, it used to belong to a deaf and dumb man. HORSES WEAR HATS HERE. SunbonnetH Dovlapil for tlm Protection of tlio Kqutne*. Horses with hats are a common sight about the streets of the city these days. The hats are of straw, of course, with high crowns and broad brims, in which are two good sized holes through which the animal's cars protrude. Sponges are generally placed in the crowns and dampened in order to keep the horses'heads cool. The hats are tied on. The equine sunbonnet lends a new significance to the phrase "I'll eat my hat." Per haps tt Is the suggestion of this idea that has something to do with the firmness with which every driver ties the bonnet on his horse. The animals for the most part, ap pear to carry their headgear without any display of self-consciousness, and trot along unconcernedly with the bonnets shaking in the breeze. Some sneak along shamefacedly, witlf their ears laid back along the brim, as if this new-fangled finery was not ex actly welcome to thorn. Others have been observed to look with some thing like contempt on their un capped brothers and sisters, whose complexions are undefended from the sun. An east side Iceman, whose team wore the new headgear, alleged this morning that his mare Invari ably grew restless and threatened to bolt unless her headgear was set straight. This statement, if it be true, is not without pyscholological value. In Washington the Humane society, after some agitation ot the subject of horse hats, has announced that a number of the straws in the latest stylo are being made under the au spices of the society, and will be dis tributed among the hack drivers of the capital, to be used for their steeds. —New York Sun. Lurk of Cnnfl<lenr*. Assistant—ls the meaning of this poem absolutely incomprehensible to you ? Magazine Editor--Absolutely! You're going to accept it, aren't you? Assistant —Oh. yes. But I wasn't willing to trust my own judgment.— Life. WHERE QUININE IS RAISID. Java Han Supplanted South America— Mel hod* of Manufacture. The one staple drug that is now used the world over is quinine. j Wherever there is fever or malaria there nature's antidote stands ready to relieve the sufferer. From Patago nia to Alaska and from Ceylon to Si beria the prescription used oftenest is the white powder that is the prod uct of the cinchona tree. The dis covery of quinine by the Spaniards in South America is an old story, but it is not generally known that the world's present supply of quinine comes from the island of Java where the cinchona tree is not indigenous, but was introduced only after many failures and with infinite toil and pa- , tience on the part of the Dutch gov ernment. i Fifty years ago a Dutchman named j Hasskarl was sent to South America ] to obtain slips and seeds of the qui- J nine tree. After many adventures and * two years of wandering near the head i waters of the Amazon, Hasskarl re- / turned to Java with 16 saplings. They .1 were planted and flourished remarka- ; bly well, but when the baric was first taken, five years later, great was the disappointment to find that Hasskarl had been duped, and that the saplings were not cinchonas at all. Another attempt was made a few years later, when an English mer chant, a Mr. ledger, sold to the Dutch planters some cinchona seed he had obtained in Bolivia Twenty thousand trees grow from Ledger's seed, and many of them are still standing. The quinine forests are planted in clearings in the jungle and are kept as free from weeds as a flower garden in this country. When a tree is six years old it is cut down and a new slip planted alongside of its roots, so that the quinine supply is never dl- / minlshed. The bark is stripped from -A the trunk by Javanese women. They j cut it into short lengths and dry it, j first in the sun and later in ovens. The dried bark Is then put through a crude mill, which cuts it into small bits. These are shipped In bags to Amster dam or Bandoeng, the centre of the quinine industry of Java. At the factory the bark is mixed with an alkaloid and ground again. It is then pumped into immense tanks filled with hot crude petroleum, which dissolves the alkaloid from the bark. The oil in turn is washed out with sulphuric acid to remove the alkaloid, and the crude quinine# crystalizes when it is cooled. The crystals are then placed in trays to dry. In 100-pound cans the finished quinine is now ready for the market The cutting down of the cinchona tree is the distinctive feature of Dutch quinine culture. The old South Amer ican method was to peel the bark and then wait four or fivp years until it grew on again. "But this process \ ' proved too slow for cinchona gather- ,r ers. and during the last decade thous ands of trees have been cut down, without any new ones being planted in their places. As a result, the ac cessible quinine forests of South America are greatly depleted and com paratively little of the general sup ply comes from the part of the world where it was discovered. Quinine of an inferior quality comes from Ceylon, and the British govern ment supplies its army nnd navy hos pitals from plantations of Its own in the Himalaya mountains. The Growth of Floriculture. It is said that in the state of Con necticut there are more than 800,000 feet of glass devoted wholly to the growing of flowers for commercial purposes, nnd doubtless a similarly good showing could be made in other states. Vet not so many years ago flowers were looked upon as an ex pensixe luxury that, for somo curious H reason, whimsical rich people liked to 1 have. Indeed, it is not too much to say that the average American of a generation ago would have been rath er ashamed to avow openly any lik ing for flowers. Such a taste would have been looked upon as a mark of effeminacy, to bo ridiculed, if not con demned. But today the appreciation of flowers is general and the amount of money Invested in tbelr cultivation is in the aggregate enormous. But the commercial side of the question is, after all, subsidiary. The growing I love for flowers misdirected though it sometimes is, indicates an increas- j ing sympathy with the beauty and " of nature that Americans have lacked hitherto, perhaps because na ture was the first and greatest ob stacle they encountered in their early pioneer life. Similarly, Americans used to feel somewhat ashamed to confess that they were from the coun- j try, because, from the point of view of the pioneer settler, the city repre sented civilization, while the country stood for struggle, privation and, per haps poverty. Happily, however, that provincial view Is passing away with the growth of a higher culture and a keener understanding of the beauties of nature.—New Vork Tribune. Glvfi Everybody n Chance. Emerson's dictum that we should treat every one as if he were all he ought to be is an excellent rule to pratice In dally life. It is human na ture to rise to the level that is ex pected of it. It is not necessary to wanle time upon uncongenial people if unless you are bound to them by strong family ties; but it is important that all with whom you come in con tact be studied with the desire on your part te give credit for all that is rood In them, and that nothing Id I their outward circumstances or ap- V pearance be allowed to prejudice you against them.—Ada C. Sweet, in the ! Woman's Home Companion. 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers