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i sale at Hota- §t. and Broad- oard Walk, ord depot. bow go to the the legis- as decided 0 AsSsessors, d, but it has ey shall de- duties of the ence of opin- the number d it is prob- 1 be discussed eport reaches ommendation the elimina- the board, one or reappoint- have declared pmbers. There in the coun- and it is pos- It is being the standpoint hat is intro- usually take jumber of as- ed on the if it is pro- ote all their be more ex- present plan. been decided nlng in that pme reason to one when the ere is no well assessments e up properly n. is not given ittee has been aller number or all of a he time to it. ome for such pn. It will of ' but’ the pro- gely to cause dissatistaction peil may or goes over the mittee it will fliscussion. TAXED tomobile law of the e local list a been made. a substantial les and there ey should not re a heavy oads and the them in taxa- ate for the 8 dealing with eeds to &go owners are e privilege hey number ma- | public utilities bill than mod- pmoblle owner i he was once, avé become pple have pur- natter of fact that are the ‘the highways to think that 'e money that er it can find are supposed ew extra dol- be asked to pot a matter to ch spirit. mquiry it is ' does not pay iing, but he bd to pay be- the money. should he be tion. Com- - well as the | and they jof any revenue juses an ex- p 1s a road de- communities pair it is the ompensated in otherwise done. a BOR. ore the legisla- hich interests iy lh\" an i Work on subways and vity dg a loser by the fact objection has been resident employcs contractors ployed to ments. law made in faith not there would not be so much of a fuss being made out of the efforts of certain men to have the city live up to it There are two sides to this question at present because there are su many men out of employment. Let us look at them, The idea in enacting such legisla- tion is to insure the employment of local people on public work for the reason that as they have to pay for it they should have the privilege of per- forming it. There can be no reason- able objection to such an argument as that except that it is difficult to obtain the services of local men for such work. The character of the labor employed is made up of a cl such as the New York law prohibits. The men who used to work on the streets, sewers and subways years ago are all dead or they have become so weakened by age that they are no longer active and their sons will not work at the same class of labor. This has forced contractors to seek else- where for men and they are finding them among the large number of people wo are coming from other countries. Were it not for those men it would seem as if it would be im- possible to build railroads and the imporvements which every growing city demands and which must be done. Just now there are so many people idle that the law is objected to, the unemployed of New York desiring to do the work themselves. It would seem as if they have the right side of the argument at present and contrac- tors ought to be compelled to give them the preference. There nothing unreasonable in that and on the face of it it would seem as if any other arrangement would be unfair to those people. The non-naturalized alien may do the work cheaper and that is what the contractor wants but the other side should be given some attention too. The law.will in all probability be repealed but that will hardly constitut ewise :\u-tlou. that that to hired raiscd non- being by have Dbeen em- certain improve- evidently who make The good was because it was 58 various is CHAMBER OF COMMERCE It will only be a week or ten days now when the hearing will be held on the Dbill introduced by the Con- necticut Chamber of Commerce pro- viding for the amendment of city charters, whichH has attracted so much attention throughout the state. This organization was formerly the State Business Mens' association which took such a prominent part in placing the BILL. among the laws of the state. The manner in which a charter can be amended according to this bill is that a vote can be taken by the electors on the matter of choosing @ commission to prepare a charter, provided ten per cent. of the electors ask 1t; it of those voting favor a commission, the nine members receiving the most votes shall be choscn; when the is completed it shall be submitted to the voters and if a majority it then it shall become operative within thirty days. It can be seen from this that the whole matter lies in the hands of those immediately intercstea and that the law can th who will have to and not by men who perhaps may never have been in the city, nothing about its busincss or its peo- ple and care nothing either. It would do away with going to Hart- ford, every time an amendment is de- sired _and having it passed upon men who know nothing about it ex- cept such as may be glecaned from a hearing which may or may not be sufficiently explanatory. There be some features of such a provision which may not suit every but if there are they are of no great importance and can hardly constitute a valid objection against the measure. It ought to be an easy matter for municipalities to transact their own business without outside help. It used to be felt that cities were not equal to that kind but that fallacy has long since been dis- posed of by irrefutable arguments. 1f there are any objections at all they must refer to the roundabout way re- quired to get at the work, but all this be done at regulan as well as at for a majority work vote for be made by live under it know by may one, of service, can a special clection and the acceptance or rejection of the charter or amend- ments, whichever they may be, can be voted on at similar meeting. The plan has much to recommend it and a as it now reads it is a decided im- provement over the present method. Congressman-elect P. Davis Oakey, who retires from the Hartford board of assessors this month, has been pre- gented with a diamond stick pin by bis associates in the assessors’ office iry. It concerns hich” prohibits non-naturalized ‘works, It is is law is delay- as he retires. He goes to Washington this week to look congress over dur- ing the closing hours of the longest session on record. Mr. Oakey was assessor in Hartford for sixteen years. —Bridgeport Post NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1015. FACTS AND K That the people of Connecticut are thrifty and were not compelled to draw overmuch on their resourc during the business depression which marked the latter part of the v 1614 is shown by the fact that the net gain in deposits in savings banks and trust companies during the month of 565.81.— January, 1915, Hartford Post. was )43 the “Amer Sy Indo can Leg and my f members, ' plan for an the colonel writes: ur sons will gladly As the plan of gion contemplates that its bership will be recruited. from mer members of the army, navy National Guard it is a little to see how the Roosevelt qualifies so unanimously. The col- onel, of course, fought and decided the Spanish war Theodore, j was for a brief time a major on the staff of Governor George L. Lilley. But just where did the other Roosevelt boys get military experience, than that gained by sociation with their distinguished fathe Iartford Times. the mem- fo First vou catch your rat. Then you him, and finally move away to new and turn him loose to return to his ac customed haunts. The other rats will become so envious that they will shun him, and will fina homes. Such, at least, is the state- ment of the- Massachusetts state Beard of Agriculture, which ought to know, for it has employed a rat ex- | pert. Another iz to tle a bell around the neck of one o1 them. The friends and associat of the belled rat soon hecome so irr tated that they run away in their efforts to ostracize the offender. The rai with the bell will run away, too for rats do not love solitude.—Nor- wich Record, Of the total of railroad fatalities in this country the mafjority occur persons trespassing on the railroad tracks, 'We are a nation of track- walkers, No amount of cautioning as to the danger of the practice, no number of deaths through thus tempting fate seem to have any per- ceptible influence in lessening the evil. If it is a little shorter route to take the track to or from work, or any rlace to which we are in the habit of going, the danger of taking the track does not seem to act as a deterrent. In fact, the spice of danger may be an attraction that operates more or less unconsciously upon the individual, At all events It is an American cus- tom.—Bridgeport Standard. When a man who has ¢ ten months state prison 'rved all but of a five-year term confinement finds a departs without bidding good bye to his jailors an dtaking the five-dollar suit of clothes which the state might give him, presumably it is fair assume that his imprisonment has not induced in him g satisfactory change of heart. A man who has stood prison for over four years ought to be able to endure another ten months. Surely he was very thus irregularly. Of course the state will be justified in using every means in its power for his recapture, and in adding to his unexpired term a sub- stantial number of years to make him remember.—New Haven Register. Boy Scout Gardene (Indianapolis News.) No step taken recently in the Boy scout movement is more commend- able or has behind it more good sense or better,motve or before t promise of more favorable results than that which provides for « practical co- operation between the jevenile mem- | bers of the organization and the fed- | The | eral department of agriculture. plan, in brief, purposes to set the boys at work at gardening. new insignia have the scouts who attain merit in this division of ‘the organization cnter- prise and, for the present at least, a candidate receives an honor when he has performed succe one of the following tasks: Operate a garden plot of not less that twenty square feet and show net profit of not less than $5 on the season’'s work. Keep accur record. 2. Grow To this end, been designed fully an one twenticth of an of potatoes. Select ten hills which sced potatoes are to be Grade potatoes into three Market, medium and culls. facture the culls into potato rch for home use. Keep an accurate crop reord of the season's work. 3. Keep both back and front yards acre from taken. divisions: in good condition for the summer va- | cation of three months, which will in- | clude the care of the garden and flowers, mowing of lawn, keeping the yvard free from waste paper and rub- bish, and the like. Keep record of the vacation’s work 4. Build a backyard trelli and grow a covering of vines for it in a season's time of not more than four months. Write an account of not less than 500 words, telling how the work was performed. Nothing in the list is difficult, but none of the things can be done prop- erly or successfully without steady, sustained effort. And the value of effort and application of that sort is precisely what most boys need to learn. It is part of boy nature to de- velop sudden interest in some new enterprise, to work at it prodigiously for a brief time and then te lose the interest suddenly as it was developed. Unfortunately, though, the serious business of 1 cannot he conducted in any such capricious fashion. It de- mands persistence, and it will profit the boy to learn this early and to learn it well. mear that end, these four ' i’ pre the department of agriculture could hardly be improved upon, and par- ents’ of boys who are not Boy scouts would find it well worth while to set their own, sons at one or another of them, and see to it that the work, once begun, is not dropped. i bhecome Te- or difficult family other | v move away to new | to ! of | way | out through the bars of a skylight and | 1o | foolish to depart | for | badge | a| Manu- | accurate | WHAT OTHZERS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald effice. A Bet on the Wrong Horse. (Kans: City Times.) England fought one war and inter- vened in another to prevent IRussia from reaching Constantinople. Ye terday the British foreign secretary announced that “with [tus de- sire for access to the England in entire accord.” It confirma- tion of the famous remark of the late Lord Salisbury that in supporting Turkey England had ‘‘put its money on the wrong horse.” Undoubtedly England to some ex- | tent is making virtue of necessity | At the same time there can be no | doubt that a great change had come | in the relations between the two nations at the time of the signing of Anglo-Russian convention over Persia cight years . | Russia has been England's tradi- | tional enemy on its Indian horder. | Kipling's carlier storie tussian danger that wi { English in India and wgainst the bear that man was the expression | lic sentiment of the time. sian Constantinople was | an intolerable menace | canal ana to British | with India. But it was sea is a | | the s folt by his walks the like a of the pub- A Rus- regarded as to the Suez communicatiqn discovered ten years ; to annoy the rats | back that there was room enough in Asia for both England and Russia, | and the two nations were able to set- | tle their differences as to Afghanistan {and Tibet. Then when they | on their spheres of influence in | Persia and jointly paid the oxpenses L of the new shah’'s coronation, the { source of a good share of the an- | cient rivalry disappeared. KEngland, | was convinced that the Russian occu- | pation of Constantinople wonld not be | nearly the peril that it had feared. This tardy discovery doesn't bring back the lives lost in the futile mean war which was waged to keep Russia out of the Turkish capital. It doesnt wipe out the blood stains in | Macedonia that followed British in- tervention in the Russo-Turkish we It does disclose the futility of selfish diplomacy which is ready sacrifice lives to solve 5 ought to be settled on a basis of reason. One of the tregadies of the world is that a diplomatic bet on the wrong horse is usually paid in blood of men who had nothing to do | with laying the wager Reversible Seasons, (Providence Journal.) a questions that The month of February furnished the clim to a strange and para- | doxical winter. It may still be early | to sbeuk of the vagaries of winter in | the past fense, for three weeks yet | remain before the arrival of the ver- | nal cquinox and by the calendar there { Is something to expected But "J\l;u‘vh in this latitude usaally has | certain well-defined tvaditional mani- | festations may be disagreeable on the | average, the beginning of the month | commonly brings the prevalent faith | that the “backbone” of winter has | been broken. December, January and are generally regarded as be | February the montag of ‘“‘real winter.” So whatever March may offer in the way of abnormal severities, it is not inappropriate to contemplate the win- | ter in review thing of the past. It is/an amiable custom of weather experts insist that rasonal aver- ages are well maintained from | year to and that there have { been no marked climatic changes in the last half-century. Nevertheless, lay observers have been noting an in- | creasing tendency of the seasons to perforin creatures of infinite va- riety, flckleness and perversity, and to a notable degree the past three 1!””[1[1\5 have been madly out of tune | with the climatic precedents of re- cent year IEven the most conserva- tive expe are compelled to admit | that February was an abnormal month. The inexplicable phenomenon of {he present winter has been its complete reversal of modern winter weather procedure. Some our oldest in- habitants can remember when winter used to begin some time previous to Thankspiving, with ice, snowfalls and all the usual a Ior some yvears the o has been postponed or thereabouts, and gradual crescendo o onal altc | and thaws, I the climax some as a to fa year, of f frigidity until Christmas then there was movement, with ations of cold *'sn until February brought of weather. 1for years IFebruary has had the | mean temperatures and the . nowfalls, :on has afforded a reversal of the usual conditions. Our genuine winter came in December, beginning carly in the month, January was re- markable for its precipitation, mostly in the form of rain, and for it companying mildness, February d tinguished itseif by behaving like a little lamb, with abnormally high temperatures and very little snowfall, There was more than the normal amount of sunshine, and in general the month had a premonitory gestiveness of spring, ven the few raw days were more fypical March than of February. March came in like the lamb, but whatever the furnish in tempermental rigors the previous record cannot be changed. The winter has been one of complet ly reversed and highly eccentric con- ditions, vere 1C sug- last of proverbial month may The New Drug Law, (Troy The new national drug into effect today, March 1, and the provisions are of a kind that should command careful consideration by all concerned, The act places the sale of habit-forming drugs, including various derivatives from oplum anq coca, under the control of the federal government through the internal rey- enue department, According to the provisions of the act all persons who Times.) law went I is | re full of the | warning | agreed | Cri- | to | the | aps” | genuine harmony with the Amrnrnni Board's” staff in North China. The Peking bureau which finances and sends out the lecturers had planned an itinerary covering & num- ber of cities where the American Board has outstations and the men were gratified by an invitation to use the boards’ chapels and to receive ietters of introduction to cach place Dr. Arthur H. Smith, of Peking, in telling of this plan co-operation, | says “Those who know China can see what potentialities lie wrapped in such a movement.' manufacture, sell, uge or in any way dispose of the class of drugs in ques- tion must register annually with the collector of internal revenue for the district in which they reside, Those | whose register must pay a special tax of $1. The law applies not only to | | druggists but to physiclans, ‘dentists, veterinariang and all others ' who handle the drugs for any = purposc whatsoever. It is also forbidden to sell or give away such drugs excepl on the written order of the person to | whom the article is sold or given. | The order is made in duplicate and a | copy must be kept by the seller for at least two years, subject to inspec- tion by any agent of the revenuc ser | vice or by any state or municipal of- ficial hav oversight of the sale of drugs. Violation of the act he punished by a fine of $2,000 im- prisonment for not more taan five years or by both fine and imprison- ment. This somewhat drastic statute is aimed at an evil which has attained | family table was not only a necessity vast' proportions throughout the coun- | to lower the high cost of living, but try—the illegitimate sale and harm- | that it would be a preventive of fll- ful use of such drugs as opium, co- | Ness and place clamp on doctors’ caino, heroin and other habit-forming | Pils. substances which make physical de- Vegetables, generatés and moral the | healthful, victims, The danger has grown out bf the latitude allowed in the hand- ling of these substances, and the new law, applicable uniformly through- | out the is expected to inter- | pose a check., of 1y adelphia Dean Watts of the Pennsylvania state college has given the housewife | something upon which to ponder. | Speaking before the Philadelphia srange at Bustleton he asserted that the use of more vegetables at the Snggestions, Pross.) g may or a too, the more and _expert the' eating quantit by leads to ill- arc educator that perverts of 3 declares of meat in such g the American health. Increase in population, too, declares the dean, has alw been followed | by a larger use of meat as diet, This is ‘explained, of cou due to | the less use of Jand for farming pur- poses, hence a stimulus killing cattle, shecp and all meat-producing animals Statistics, the stated, showed that where a vegetable or milk diet reigned the mortality lessened, Ixclusion of us a diet Dean Watts not favor, He believes that it is an essential in every family. However, he declare that Amer- ica has much to learn of the nutritive value of peas, beans, etc, and that the sooner housewives realize their excellgnce and strength the bhetter for them, MRS. G. B. CERMOND Be people states, wholesome as Filipinos Dissent. (Manila Times.) for son Martin, vice governor of , tells a senate commit- tee that the Filipino people e |.the ignorant peasant class, are a unit for independence. Though he did not expressly state, he inferred that the Kilipino of all ¢ »s, wants indepen- dence at any en if it involves Jaunching the b of the 1"ilipino republic uncharted s with only the protection that the i*lipino government can give it. Americans and Europeans of residence in these islands will take exception to this statement. They will cite instances of confidential con- versations with some of the most | prominent men of the Filipino race who see nothing but disaster ahead Henden the Philippine dean sa for was meat does t o« frail on cc does long of a Filipino republic. Any banker of Manila will vouch for the fact that Filipino capital, already timid of the future, is planning new investment, in foreign lands. If you have a Filipino | freind who stands for something in | the community, he will, in a moment | of confidence, tell you of the re-| ! ¢ponsible Iilipino's fear of an inde- sendent government here, In tn . :mu breath, he will pledge you to! Pfiasmfl Play a[ Hanmm | tecrecy, and this may be the reason | Henderson Martin has heard nothing | B »f this sentiment. As the vice gover-| Mps, G. B. Germond, of 171 Lincoln nor of an administration pledged to | oo o S e s hasten the day of independence, Mr.| = "7 i Martin can hardly expect to be the | Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary confidant of the Filipino who opposes | Conference of the Hartford independencc The same rouxnlvm tion at the forty militate against his learning the | Rt | truth. as opprate agatnat the success of | P& held yesterday . the movement to forward to Washing- | ning in the First Baptist church. Mrs. fon a monster petition asking for | Willlam Hesse, the continuance of American control clected here. The mass of the Filipino people | Mys, idwin R. Hitcheock, of 69 Wal- is a unit for independence without | nut street, was elected a member of thought of the consequences. It takes | (1o oxecutive committee. a high degree of courage for a Tre-| [ight young women from New Brit- sponsible Filipino to fly in the face Of | 4in gave an impersonation at the eve- that sentiment. Among even the po- | oo™ o g0l ocenting “Mother- htical leaders of the Iilipino people, |y o 0 . there must be grave misgivings about | " & the future of a Filipino republic, but | o (o you will find no man ready to make ! o = ublic expression of that fear, just us | g‘n the days of the terror in the Krench | &0 ‘““8“’_-” | revolution, you would have found | heaven with | no man ready to take a public stand | She made aun sgainst the excesses of the ,mob which | Women, but after hearing what six of Luled Paris. Back of this in the | them had to say, finally gave the child Jrench revolution, was the fear of | to ”P(. An‘wrlv n mother execution. Back of it here is the fear Migs Frances represented of being called a traitor to' the Kili- |ispirit land woman and the first pino cause, the dread of racial ostra- | whom she tried to the baby was § Miss Irene Vivian, dressed as a Chin- right | ese woman The others were Miss Fili- | Viola Strosser, an Ofrican; Miss Mar garet Bell, Mrs, Chester Corbin, Miss Itthel Swain, Miss Olive Jordan, Miss ELECTED PRESIDENT ‘NGW Britan Yousg Women Give was president assocla- econd annual meet- afternoon and eve- of 440 Church street, was corresponding secretary. a of to the eighth the young women were represent seven countries, being dressed to represent who came down from a baby girl in her arms, appeal to the seven the to Joy give a tl more here can be found, by gort of an investigator, | pinos of position than Americans op- | posed to the present Jones bill. He 1 will find far more rejoicing in some | Catherine Buell, as an American. vilipino circles over the cabled an-|The American mother could bring the nouncement that pressure legisla- | child up as & christian, and for that tion will probably cause a |...:,nmn_r»\,.,;,_\,," rocalvel tive . baby ‘2rofh /the menit of action on the measure then in [ g iy the entire American community We M believe that the majority of Ameri- .ans here share the feeling of the imes that postponement of action on the Jones bill would be a calamity for | ihe islands. Its passage would mean | the end of an era of uncertainty that began with the clection of President Wilson, It would clarify the Philip- \ine atmosphere and give s ; 3 1 bt rl‘m-n opportunity to adapt ther ‘xv:H. Hartford; Mrs. I J. White, | selves to conditions the exact nature | Hartord; Mr J.‘ N. I'“.CM'\' _l‘l\airbt- | of which they could understand, while | ford; Mre. w. Smith, Suflield; Mrs. it would satisfy the clamor of the | Isasc Glazier, Hartford; Mrs. Filipino politician, | R. A. Mayer, Hartford; Mrs. John Mackenzie, Hartford. Recording secretary | Hatheway, Hartford. Corresponding secretary—Mrs, Wil- | iam Hesse, New Britain, Confucian lecture bureau in Pe- | jupior secretary—Mrs. has been sending out bands of | ywest Hartford. speakers through cities and towns | rpregsurer—Miss E. within a radius of the capital to | ford. discourse on dutied to society, train- Auditor—>irs. ing of children and other themes which are new and strange to the av- | erage citizen except as he gets hold | Bridgeman, of them in some mission &chool or | yiicheock, church. The speaking num- } S ber ten each and there three of | - "o rtford; theny . Hartford and One Sunday afternoon not | Harttora when the “Gentry” Bible This - nowtmiing Tungchow, a suburb of of Miss Bdns L. came together, some of the and M bers, men of the higher class in city, told the clas leader who Rev. 1. C. Porter, of the American Board, that one of these bands was speaking in a nearby building where the board’s meetings were often held. The subjects announced were nearly parallel with those often discussed by the class, so presently the Bible cl adjourned and went in body listen to the visiting lecture Porter was much interested the men, invited them to hi and had a long talk with them as to their | aims, their methods and their back- ing. They are not familiar with Chiristianity though they know some Christians. They are eager to spread | Helen Barrett Montgomery | the work of the society. Ifollowing is the list clected: President—DMrs, New Britain, Vice Presidents Thompson, Hartford; of officers G. Germond, e Mrs. H. M. husine: Mrs. W. G. Fen- an N - Miss Sarah Using Confucian Lecturers, (lxchange.) A Allen Brown | king Hart- L. Carey, G. W. Curtls, Wind- committee—Mrs C. J. Hartford; Mrs. Edwin R. New Britain; Mrs. 7.V Hartford; Mrs. C. W. Emer Mrs. H. H. Dickinson, Mrs. 1 C. Wilbur, Iixecutive bands are long ago in Peking, | mem- the is class committee consist- Reld, Mrs. L. M. John H. Belden. ed Parmelee 2 5% COUGH g It is not safe nor necessary. You can relieve it with Hale's Honey Of Horehound and Tar te Mr, in house It does not upset digestion or nerves. Is pleasant to the taste. Contains nc All druggists. gave a short address in the evening on | McMILLAN'S ew Dress Goods and Suitings for Spring 1915 56 INCH ARMORITTE The new reproduced $1.50 Yd with the seed effeot the such as Putty, Blue, weave in the wool, all new spring shades are here. Rescda, Moss Green, Hague Eelgian Blue Purple and 50-inch $1.25 yard. 50-inch BAR Navy, Amethyst, Pansy Black FACONNE NOUVEAU ATHEA, 11-inch GABERDINE, $1.00 yard 41-inch PREMIER CREPE, $1.00 yard, $1.25 yard, ONLY Don't sults and dresses made up now. FOUR WEEKS TO FASTER, be disappointed, have your Our stock of Dress Goods is rich with new weaves for Spring. OUR SPECIAL DRESS GOODS, At 79c¢ Yard, 40 inch Wool Taffetas, Togo Cloth 650 inch stood the test for hard Our materials shrunk. Popling and that have wear, English Serges are sponged and SHEPHERD CHECKS Will be exceptionally good for Spring wear. We have them priced 19¢ 1o $1.25 yard, SPRING NUMBER Standard Fashion Book Now Ready, Price 20¢, with One Pattern Vree, Subscriptions taken now for the De- signer. a year, Special subscription price 80c Regular price 75e. D. McMILLAN 199.201-203 Main Stroet. M’CUMBER PUSHES FARM LOAN PLAN THROUGH SENATE (GENATOR 70 PER Mar. providing farm 1.~—A farm cred- for owners Waghington its bill, loans the its government was attached bill natc to to agricultural appropriation the [ Presented by Senator McCumber in passage through was in bill an amendment the provision corporated in the appropriation without a but record vote at a time wWhen few senator chan The creat the loans were in the beer. would its in make through national mortgage notes, run for ten terest and $10,000 United MeCumber a bureau of treasury of smendment far department 1o m crec funds farm would government banks Th years at would be individuals on loans cent. in than of per not less Issue 1% per permanent to States twenty pear cent. bonds to establish a fund of $10,000,000 to cover loans would be authorized. This other ch inc amount of the ppropriation bill from 5,000,000 to u $ 000 such and AR reased the agricultural $ N, EMIL H. R. VOGEL, Voice Culture what we westerners call “the gospel” and in that way will work in opium nor anything injurious. \ Tey Pike's Toothache Drops //0 l 179 Glen Street lel. 339 12