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8 Py NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1910, e e ————— e e - —— ew Britsin Herald\iv 1% 0 g ypars aco | ANDREW CARNEGIE, || USED GREAT FORTUNE IN | | ' SERVICE FOR MANKIND Ghe McMillan Store Probrietors. noretate ot (From the Herald of that Date) we are told, back in Boucd daily (Sunday exceptedd at 4:18 { the country somewhere. Cheer up; | [i HEAD | 267 Church St. . i ' A s [ we nave not discarded the brutes « \uzust (1, (894, L] y $2.00 Three Months. titely: | Ouc tunl will be avaiable Edward J. Collns wis fine and e, | T6c a Month. \ g costs tor obstructing Constable Rawl- J 3 B cerct ot the Por omee at New Dritam | SOMCPOY and so will our means of | jngg when he and other officers raid- (Continued from First Page) as Second Class Mail Matter. existence, we predict cd the former's place the other day. T — _— s rs. V. J. Rawlings and her moth- | chanses, physical —and mental, | (Inc.) Bt Ot BETIONEACATIES 13 HOOVER, HUNGER er, Mrs. Jenny of this city will speng | causel by the war. B e 928 AND THE RUMANLANS the next week at Niantic | . Daughter Itecently Married. | “ALWAYS RELIABLI e } 25k HE D | W. H. Bart has returned to Cottage | The marriage of Mr. LnGadols e The onty profitable advertising mealum fn | Ierbert C. Hoover promises to b | ciry, Mast. j only_daughicr, Margaret on April 23 e DA e L o B o M was o ke iaees, | the saviour of the Allies and, inci-| Thomas O'Connor will return from | '© Eaoen '7"““’”]“"‘]_"’» U, s ! X rior e S g ; i Block Tsiand Monday. was the last secial affair the aged dentally, the gavians, in the mili- | ) ol Lot ase | Member of the Associated Tress. Ly, e liunsarl 0T H. Brady has returned from a | Philanthropist and peace advocate at- i . e LT e S e s e e ugust davings the use for republication of all news | o Or i late fenemy where the| M iy formed at Mr. Carnezies' town house credited to it or not otherwise credited | COUNtry of the late enemy where The Misses ldnglish, daughters of 2 | in this paper and also local Dews | Rumanians are in occupation. Vir- | Oficer English, are visiting in Provi- | in the presence of 100 guesis the bride Rumanians are in occupation. published heretn, I eince LT standing in a floral bower and Scofch e e et e | LUl ultimatums from the confer i Attorney W. F. Delaney acted as | baspipes blaying in accordance with | | M NRIND AL i airis Shuve S had WlitUlem availiim (900 ae e e o T ey o e a o I".uvl"".:Hyw\’\“ wish T u- | was hefore the court this morning for Ehonbritisgergons asonpo oy e removal of still more tra 1 2 s =< « of the Chic Milwaukee | - i o ook the illegal sale of heer president L His from the New Haven system was an. | Ma0ians and it scems that lack of {andSU Papl vailroad, who died in 1913, had not completed his college coursy when war on Blankets and Comfortables FULL SIZE COTTON BLANKETS checking the invasion of the food will cventually stop the army Rounced today, despite the indicatic where force will be unavailing. Natior as declared. In Saturday that the clouds were break- al Happenings. Mr. Hoover was instrumental in ing and that the strike on the rail- The country’s cash—sub treasuries aiding Rumania and possibly saved | not overvurdened with it—public debt increased $80,000,000-—Isxpendi- of government since last year | have cxceeded the receipts. to haye greater prestige with them | Ching s money—De e onthe avelen i bt o L | China wants moncy—Demands tri- | i her subjects than any other man or any nation.| bule fron roads was on the mend rather than e S her from absolute starvation through | he 8rowing worse. The freight embargo] i y his food shipments. He is now said placed on this city in common with x oth White and Grey, value $3 4% —Japan pour- lifted and shows no signs of being I = i i AUGUST sSALL i His efforts as a mediator have been ' iN8 troops into Iforen—Watching the i i ot $3 9 lifted. There are about twenty cars Chinese fleet. RICE ... Pair . sought, it is understood, and may be & day coming into the city, most of g [ which were started on their way uget | work of train wreckers—*Fort Worth | ' The threat to cut off food ship-|ac:ommodation” wrecked while cross- fon o le by the council: NS Sait Lake Crcek and fell forty | There is absolutely nothing going ouc | TSNS to them made by | feet below to the bed of the river—— | via the ra may have had the effect of the prom- | Byurning coai from engine sets fire to ised retirement from Budapest upoa coaches. the part of the Rumanians. That “a ST ad number eleven—Supposed | SMALLER COTTON BLANKETS fore the present trouble cropped ont. For Cots, Cribs and Small Beds in white and gre AUGU. PRICE .":-,‘(-1. $2-25 roads. Naturally the offi- ®ials "are doing their best to keep foodstuffs moving, though there is port, while we supply the hardware large army travels on its stomach” is Resurrecting Blue Laws. mone being shipped from this localify. S S | ‘ an indubitable fact. Allies have Jew Touk Heraid, RO : We are dependent upon what we ro- 1% IMOUB IS ¢ CURELlS s (¥ ivor KE HoraldD) | BED COMFORTABLES BRive from other sectionsiforionr sups he wherewithal for the stomach an New York t Sunday professional | Filled with selected sanitary may profitably use it. baseball by virtue of a law recently [ [ | Placed upon the statute boo Sun- cotton fallinewsand treah; day amateur ball games date from a time many years back. All the links in and about the city, public and pri- vate, are crowded on the first day of the week with devolees of golf. Not the wildest fanatic who ever invoked or dug up a blue law could and tools which, in a great many ways TN (S e “The nim of the Millionaire should which we get in return be to die poor and thus avoid di grace,” said Andrew C: “The highest use of fortunes is in public wo contribute to the success of the crovs AUGUST SALE $5 98 PRICE Each . Should the strike cripple trans portation for very much longer, it has Balance of Qur been stated that some of the local service for mankind. Th assert with truth that church-going | Sl factories will have to close down for true antidote to unecqual distri- persons are disturbed by the golfers ‘, k f P t & time. They cannot ship nor will| bution and would pave the way or the ball players. The fact of the MRS, ROSWELL MIL} | tOC 0 ar By be ablo to zet raw materials, for the communist idcal in the matter is that in its present regula- et 2 | INHERI HLLIONS, CARNEGIE vet unevolved future. He mus consider his surplus trust func tions this state follows the old prac- | tice in vogue in all liberal communi- The reaction that will come later from Woo! Blankets here i an ¢ the closing of a factory that supplies as held for the community, and ties in the past where it was regard- | 1915 he loft Stevens Institute in Ho- | | goods needed in agriculture need the best means of distribution ed as proper and fitting that once & | hojon, where he was taking a course | | About twenty-five pairs in aji hardly be explained. The holding up| "V Siving free libraries, parks, |man had attended to his religious | jn civil engineering, to drive an mm- I — AT e 1 works of art, and public institu- | duties he could spend the rest of | ujuce in France, and awhen (he Unit. | @ Some slightly soiled from nand- Bf the tools is bound to create higher | o o" 2% B0 SAC DUO theldaylastneliplcasealiprovided She i ol siites hecan s inh blved helonteran { B ling. All marked” at clearance prices, and if the strike' lasts long “The rich man may exper- did not disturb his neighbors, the navy as an ensign | prices enough to bring about an acute| ence the stimulus of being in TG Sl Gk o e el Daughter 22 Years OId. | ’ shortage of implements, we will nos-| 9ebt by anticipating income in | Of 2 mediacval associaion of Mmed-| 1t was said at the time of the wed- | s - RO R R i works for the general good and £oeEoln s bacag) e ressed o thefding that after the honeymoon M. | _ St = - 3 o nosall Wl G e LR state police of Massachusetts resulted | Niiljor and his bride wontt an e HIOWS an illuminating exposition of the de- gance and ostentation. Death In the prohibition of all golf Playing | princeton, N. J.. where he would com- | he could with discrimination. On | tonished his schoolmaster in Dun- pendability of each class of producers | duties and Inheritance faxes, :'{“'I [](:;1\”01{2”;:21& l\_'::”:]‘;‘“\'_ neighborhood | piece his studies before entering upon | libraries alone he spent upwards of | fermline by reciting n\v‘u-y long poem, | Filled with Fresh, New Feu- upon the other. The farmer needs| Provided they are high enough, What e Tot of pevaonsldon/tisee and)|loy Liotesionall careerBiimia Bfotmeri|i803/0001000. WiHel save then (o Konia | {iMun WasEMads i{ofMourn,f lihout e T A T should be considered among the MISSRC | ngie, heiress of her father's | two thousand Inglish speaking com- | a break ccdote of our tools, we need his crops, and we never will be able lo see is that this wisest forms of taxation.” Ao millions is 22 years old. Her hus- | munities throughout the world. One | how, when asked in Sunday school to Heking ey o both need the railroads for exchang RNy Carnieie. s dead LLES | a ShE Ricontay o }““_"‘”‘"(‘ band is two years her senior. of his librarics is in the Fiji Islands. recite a proverb from Scripture, the AUGUST SALE PRICE ing our products. Such a proposition | . “ 8 Sdeore e 3 }‘1‘”’- s o \:llyv';‘-wm:‘:1'::‘.‘(.’:\‘:1.»%"1‘1“()’: Hioiarmenl At the fhmo of s e Establishes Institute, SOuBEN= R0 AR CHin e Lyggtosats LIS $3 50 up to $7 50 i B e s oo @ complisn ealinisfotjectiinga [ SEHR d e ICE s Hor st s Nl v oo a - own fortunce by giving the homely ad- | 5 & e 1Y 2o o all the meed of proper | w,y a5 he was a very rich man when | 215, as such, bave nothing to do with | y5nar5 wnd decotutions bestowed up- e remembered Pittshurgh, the | vice—“Look after the pence, and the action and regard for his fellowman, of legality. In the Middle his sun set but his benefits to man- on him by universities throughc steel-making triumphs, | pounds will take care of themselves.” | the | scene of R 1 Shat hanav i A on the other hand, the authori- 1! world. Ie received as 2 resuit of his | by establishing there a great institute, e W W Kind are many. During the latter | ties were more interested in tryving - Suracaiveg 8 resultgor s iihy estublishing tlicre ) pren bl Father Was Weaver. may get what there Is in life. The [ part of his life I | Ko men 200 than In making | enefictions abroad the freedom of | including the largest of his lbraries, | \nqrew was 12 when his ither, o 2 * | part of his life he gave away in the | to make men g g aking | 5 2 Tr S e e S / as 12 s | SR z Kiedd dE5t it quickiand Fet it Mow’ mction E { citics in Great Britain and Ireland. | & museum, a magnificent concert hall | v o5 oo Bl0 R b ‘atmost | The stock was bought, and it brought form of endowments to libraries and | !hem anything eise. Altogether he 5 endownd 3,000 munici- But the old spirit b pal libraries in the United Stat and the Carnegie Technolgical schools with a total endowment of $16,000 of one per cent to destitution. The steam looms | monthly dividenc of any group of men, any link in (ho 152been cropping so forth the sum of about one hun- 1 £ 2 i | re $ v pss. The fam- i ) out of late. What that was Lord ! | drove him out usine : First Check $10. chain, means suffering for all of the ; ; ou 2 : addition to his other numeréus phil- | 000, | e Tn e ering for all of the | dred and a half-million dollar 'fe| Macaulay described inimitably when | unthropic enterprise it He huilt sreat national institu- | 1Y numbered Sl O oo “I can see that first check of $1¢ . 1 . aMla Y S 4 E prises o b i at nation: HU- | and his younger-brother William i L g S was undoubiedly the leader in philan- | he said that the Puritan objected to i i e n : a b ! i y " he said . w The striking shopmen have mearly HEs G : hull baiting not because he was sorry “Disgracetul” to Keep Fortunc, tion in Wishington, which should be | 1,10 (s ‘decided to emigrate tp dividend money now,” he said .when E g shor have near)y | throphy: = His activilies in that line g SoAD e A the fountain head of sdvanced work = S Sorc el tive he became a retired ironmaster witl brought about a condition of panic | coy ) forithie bllibut necause ihc soscallcd AN I e Garncale Sbes il racerl Bamviear flmaias e a0 bumenco avnl Eellcas i ones fisom o elatives i “It was something new tc S £ of panic} covered many fields sport gave some amusement fo the [ asainst time when, in 1901, at the age | 17 "INV CEUEALION, TEsSiel SAC € SE0T- | preceded them with success. They | mMillions. ne of us had éver re. T TR 1 L 1 S e TR (e e e of six(Y-ive, Mo rosolved (6 Sive away | ¥ A placed'in the Mands of 15| ({0 ar Allexhey City, Pa, across all of us, for none of s had e : f rustees a fotal endowment of some | o UoS sittsburs E ceived anything b Ol slich within a very short time unless | line, in Scotland he came to the Unit. In the same way some of our re- | his enormous fortune. He held it Pkhioay ong Choro BRUhual SR L0 $20,000,000. To his nutive Scotland his larg single gift w fund of £10,000,000 to aid education in Scottish universi- The next step toward independence The father and Andrew found work they see the er j next step toward independenice : - in « cotton factory, the son as bobbin | and fortune came when T. T. Wood- boy. It was his first work. The | ruff. the inventor of the sleeping caf, aliry was $120 @ week, o wys approached him with a model or of their wa, formers would stom Sunday games not | “disgraceful” for a man to keep on o because of any incidental disorder, for | gathering idle millions. In the com- first job here | thore is none, but because they hate | paratively few years which the actu- it for an | for the weckly stipend of one dollar. | to see youns and old get any fun out | ary could allow him, he would disem- and, | ed States when but thirteen years of for the benefit of the rest of labor, | age. He worked at his return to their work and w: ost @djustment of their difficulties, pro- | Messenger hoy, telegraph operator, | of life. baTasshin sel oI riclicll il Iih o ”P;;" T e el o oo gpromoled Ria i *';f';” “"“";”“‘_ e :}«”::f‘r‘_f.'r“:,;‘l(].mr'.‘y ?-’. viding an adjustment is needed. | manager of the Pittsburgh division of S e :‘»‘}‘y'y'lml\h"’,“;:'\f”(_‘::‘I;"_"‘““"“ launehed @ hery commission, endoved i 1805 [E2 R hecy e ine i ied the | catled, “hefore, like a flash, the whole Should New Britain's shops close | the Pennsylvania railroad, he worked Capitol Changes. S mpaisn of sueh Al iin §5,000,000 by which hundreds or | tory celar, raneaotgitepvells SbUSTE MO I down, the city will see hard times and | his way upward. Investments in oil (Bridgeport Post.) His was then a fortune of just) MeM women “”‘J“'”‘,’,:“"1l";‘?"‘\“"‘()‘{g In those dingy quartprs, where he | Tes! T sald, ithat fs sometiing wh the workman will not have sufficient | lands paved the way for his entrance | IHartford ‘is disturbed becausa | about a quarter billion dollars, the | TOWE@erd Wit FRIAEEIE SEGLR BT worked twelve hours a day, came the | TR SORTRO A BRVE0 0 money to obtain food; the same will | into the steel business. He introduced | Comptrolier Webster insists on mak- | largest ever acquired by a foreign- | | - . [imspinationuchadglate iilled Mol inveatad, £or thetmanutabtureyo rescue of imperilled persons. He later | | : ! e srary hencfactions, he said. A Col. L h 0T 2 T g extended similar benefactions to sev- 100 | cars. Carnegie, then carning § x practical changes in the state | born American, second only to the The | the Bessemer process and in 1899 | I8 practical changes | N St et or be the case in many other citie capitol which will not only materially | John D. Rockefeller wealth as (he i | v, had to borrow §200 i ; : : s eral foreign countries, 20 )IRNOSSS . ‘n his | monthly, had to farmer will feel the hard times last, | his string of steel plants were bought | 214 the state in its business, but which | largest individual aceumulation in the | © A books, announced :\4 woul zy ;)mnn}‘:: el Rl S R but will feel them just as much. The | Py the United States Steel Corp. for | will also save a large sum of money, | United Staies, and, built, as it was, ARNCEC ; i > = :“H- ry ()\f‘: \l“* \;‘”'- ‘J '} -‘“ W I when he sold out his interest to the i 5 ; e { five per cent. steel bonds, it would He established the Carnegie Foun- | boys to horrow a yook o e s e e by y atisfac i i the sum of three hundred million | at least for several yea 2 ! 2 3 5 | il : et sl ER Ul man pe only grain of satisfaction in the situ- ’ Thit the Capital City would object | without so much as turning over onc's | dation for the Advancement of Teach- | please arnegic was of el 10000 for the ventare &tion is that the strikers themselves | dolar . was cortain. What they want was an- | hand, have approached half a billion | ing, with a total fund of $15,000,000, | most eag readers ) | 7 Carnegie was 26 when (he clvil war will suffer as much as they threaten His hobby was giving away money, | giper state building, no matter how | by the time Carnegic could call him- | which has taken up efliciency surveys | ed to Tmitate LRenefacto [rokatoit and ho saw: his ©)d. e B ke us suffer, particularly to public libraries where | actually unnecessary a whole. [ self an octozenarian on November 25, | of educational work, aided many in-{ . ., i 1o who has longed as. 1 did | ployer and friend Scott elevated to th the benefited town was required to | They gol Connecticut to spend about | 1915 . stitutions, and provided pensions for | ¢, Gl davk to comer he has said, | post of assistant seeretary of war EAR i raise one-half of the sum needed. He | fOur millions in —expensive public To give this stupendous sum away, | college professors. In 1911 he capi- ., \nderstand what Colonel Ander- | Carnegie in turn won an appointment USING THE AUTOMOBII, s e : & works and now they want another | in about half the time he had taken | talized his edtcational benevolence, S0 | 0 g 0 me and oiher bo of | as director of government railway FoRaibiylas funiattermatnilort il | o e wyietepunon e iau tesfiol fnnond to gather it, was a purpose Carncgie | that his gifts to libraries, colleses and | \jyopony, 15 it any wonder that Ijand telegraphs. To the carnage he : . X . "C1a rich man to a community and all But Comptroller Webster is a bus- | had fairly well frifilled when death | other institutions, should live after | 0 80T (00 5 G CC0atth came | saw at several battles may be traced Qi o2 diitouble BoossiblySbennuseot| ol I s hont et o way, | iness man. e combines the expe overtook him today. He has distrib- | him, by establishimng e Larnesic | 6T, 1 would use it imitating my | nis titcions belief in the folly af war- the fine weather and the time of the | .peneficial philanthropy,” the giving | ence of the cities with a hard-headed | uted ahout $300,000,000. It was giv- | Corporation with a fund ¢ 5,000, [ e i | fare—"a viot upon civilization year, and probably because of both Ve i | common sense of the small towns. He | ing money away at the rate of over [ 0o, | 14 Carnegic emerged from the Thveriaditnion the traffic upon the roads of the flaney of money according to a system | sces no call for fancy additions and | $20,000,000 a year, or more than $50,- | Wanted Abolition of War. engine cellar and became a telegraph Unwittingly following the lead of IBOREEHE xoads o LheRstite [ior wise benificences Insthesvear 1012 M otaces nolereatinatm in Aitering all 0008 o duv: I h et s latestAnd preates tidtals | Bssenge PN THiD oy Reid, a Dun-| 00 who was later to eclipse him in as greater yesterday than has been ) 4ione he bestrowed over one hundred | window or two in the capitol in or Era of Distribution, | was the abolition of wir, & hope that | fermline man, who had come to Am- | oo budiding, Carnegie, at 30 yea the case upon any other Sunday, or|and thirty million upon several in- | der to get more room o e He declared, when e gave up gath- | he cherished in the face of inferna- | crica carly, was h f the n‘ | of age, mvested in oil. As one o even upon special ogcasions.” Auto- | {erests 1t = G ”“"'!‘:“' r\ T "”\i‘]‘”“ ering wealth and annotneed an era of | tionai conflicts. He gave $10,000,000 | and he made \r,mv;- m;- prote ge. Tel- | cndicate he bought up & vast tract of A capitol is & model of beauty. Ang o =%, = S ek wational DPeace fund, | egraphy was then almost a new thing. | i1 1anc 1w year, to the surprise of mobiles wound their & 1y in endless e D bty SoieR o || “”mw\” h ) e g 2 s o "M o ‘:\\ T e e e | :t L)nl aon it/ il iha astonls yi ~ s also a . it more diflicult to give h millions A built the rence DMalace t The obo entured to d e« 5 a 1e investors, aid astor B Lot oo IEAGTSINANDIREAN GIESH il Bty s it o | e at Saen el Banirlion ) anallbutibilneRess s sl e s HbeT oy wenian e e D A =1k linon ors e nio i emanin eity to cily and from the mountains = - fnliithe country: to ibefbunlt witnintencilail Sl a o Sl e L 000 o Ilie. Bueatl ‘ot |ivassad) oniiaponr Cainesie s ald to| iqern ds tipon e capital ofi§40,000 and seashore. The macadam of tie| AIso sometimes it Jooks like Wil- | appropriation, the commission 000,000 away?”’ became such i popu- | Amarican Republies at Washington. have heen the third cperator in the | pyu( fron was the magnet then at hi 4 "1 liam Hohenzollern i the only man { of whom was our thoroughly Jar query that an Bnglish advertiser | Iis love of music moved him to | United States to accomplish the feat | {racting Carnegie. The railronds w Bhways saw a constant stream of | in'ihe world who wants (o saw wood. | ness-like [Bridgeport representative, | )" nhloved it. reccived no less | squip hundreds of churches and in- jof readinz messages by sound alone. | experimenting with cast iron bridges. all manner of equipages, some of | —Dallas News. the late Nathaniel Wheeler, turning than 000 su stions as to how [ stitutions with pipc organs. He never ! yractised mornings before the | (arnegie foresaw the demand for & i = f about $200,000 . . : . v r opcrators came around | factory that comld turn out the iron which, we believe, antedated Mnr. | back ahout $200, Carnegie could #d himself of his | gave directly any larze sum to re iiar operatd factory tha u Someone suggests that the final| But the very fact that the capitol Ly |ERAN ot 1 o et G PR e e snal | parts, and he formed the Keyston I © Ak by someivears lumanity O e o o e (il cto0dand wasttrusnnt | red L pawel et ou an i srson s liclousin inposss S | " he has related. ‘hef; the | Bridge Work They huilt, as the ¢ ; answer to theiproblem of who won | was so constructed, and was solved the problem in part by asking | ho said he would hold himseli respons | came,” he has related. “hefore the | Rridge Work ey b as was bound to travel yesterday, and|{he war will be Japan.—Philadel- | its construction to Connecticut prac- }(,,» sonte of the money for them- | .‘4’”,"5[\.” whut the orzan pealed forth | operators arrived ‘In those days | fivst great piece a bridge over the travel it did phia North American. tice in running the overnment for | (1 e e Cabath, it not for what | death messages were the most impor- | Onio river, with a span of 300 tect o peop P o siness rin- B . = ul One of m CRSNZES W andled ven- | pemand fo nilar s ctures becam High-seated old touring cars with T the people as near to business prin The auswers which Carnegie him- | might he said- in the pulpit ne of | tant m ges we handl 1 | Demand for similar structur ccama . General Ludendorff is quoted as | ciples as is possible with our brand i oh8 SRINAEE BOOR HCLIEE S B misht he it (L s far back | tured to take this o | weneral, and the Keystane works go the entrunce al he ‘buck, F0rds| geclining 1o express an opinion as fo | of democracy. is the best of reasons lions have made him the most orlgi- | as 1801, was the Carn Music hall | Wins Promotion. | the big orders and profits alore, roadsters of an ancient vin- | the probability of another war. Prob- | why utility should come first even at [ % FEES BECE TEE (1S B Mlee | ooy ek $2.000,000, Mo did it correctly amd delivered | Carnesie then began to see ‘;”‘y'“m' A 55 ha 't prophe- e sli r05 aow ¢ or tw 2 . e ] i 2 il did co g o St el up for stee n a tage and limousines of the lutest | ably he even wishes he ]ndn;y ll]||4|l| the “l\zhfiv cost n):'“” window or two | {1l L e S New York | 18 S8 Fefare the. okular fores | Mils must bo given up for steel. On “ i sied so freely ab e last onc.— [ in the original pls - M iThein Siel S ene 3 2 | visit to lingland in 1868 he disc Bnodell skipped or purred along with | 3ie¢ so freely about the : e . Made Gifts of $9,000,000. | Philharmonic society nt his | R duty at all. [ won hini pro- | Visit to Lnglar ¥ ain el thete ¥ g b Kansas City Times Comptroller Webster is justified e e i e el o e i | eaey ucce being obta fheir loads of humanity; it was a - going ahcad. e may feel assur s (e (il g Skenlonal i 1| SRS WEREREE B SRR Totonp ol s e ae with the Bessemer process. Carnegic motley throng. All were n pleas- Canada may yet find it necessary | that in these days of zrowing taxation | 1901 he left lefters announcing gifts | 0 ¥ S t 2 Sk L | auietly brc e om 1d befc e g A on plea ; S Pittshurah orchestra | telegraph wire of its own he hecame ; bl ure “bent and there was never - '© Put respectable criminals in jail. | and expense the people are behind the | of §1,000 His first big gift was | S e e G et linerin{oadant || the Ionglish makera were aware of £h 3 It seems {o help in the enforcement | official who seeks to redice costs, es- | the sctling aside of 1,000,000 to Ste s erk under Divisional Subeyintendont | fact, he had adoyted it in his mill thought of tho railyonds, so suddenly | or iy in the United States—Toronto | pecially when all extravagant expen- | supply pensions and relicf for the in- Loitne Mboaibrsineanigecictien e iThaniss i S0l AT AR SIRT Became Steel Magnate. turfied traitor. We are an adaptable | Globe. I diture most strongly urged by those | jured and aged employees of his \.’n‘»v! gave $2,000,000 ‘-«. sma Q’.‘,": e ‘n':; )‘ el ‘”“ Sl s 2l Wodfedl the type of some of the cars — Who would most often dodge just tax- | plants—-"an acknowledgment of the | colleges amonnted (o some §2 S enal insnoceiins Hido b I el o matice kot SoCRS T s 4 i Not %ill are in the same bhoat with | ation deep debt which i owe to the work- | 000. No man left at his death such month, anc = ond | such that the immigrant hoy of 1848 9 R S ain s 2 all 4 sd 2 ation. T " ey | e Attered series on ear he could do with so muc Py aod we will find & way,| o ckers and tanners yet we | = men who have contributed so sreatly | an unique and such a seattered sord \rth h AR e A e o e it seems. Yesterday was meant for | gtand in fheir shoes—al a price.— s . st {o my success.” He : \g(;n‘ an extin | of monuments to perpetunte his mem= money.” G (Grid's eding producer of steeel, & recreation and recreation was cn- | Wall Street Journal. BARERS) SFTRIKE ENDS. million for the support of lbrar or | ory : I | Androw was 10 when his father | @ uiti-millionaire himeclf. and fdst Mivod detbiten it + ¢ — London, Aug. 11.—The b his workmen, and look up his librayy In the backsround of these fifteen died, anc Lsan Wut e M| inging a score of other men into yed, spite e fac hat some o b H e o st - 5 Hthion Wy o breadwinner for the family and a a o 3 despite the fact that somec S En ity sks Mr. Robh- | sirike which has been progressing “"'E hobby in a wholesale way by giving | vears of phila \111 ony ‘lln is the 1 {'\]v\‘t e Sron the lam iy AR A tsl e aame catesory Many sqopes our tyavelers evidently had to put the | .4 pyder in the Ohio State Journal, ' son:e time, ended yesterday. The men | $5.200,000 1o New York city for the | familiar story o e :Vluivlj I ‘:»‘p.'\‘(n\'»rmmo\r 4 peen told by hie ) lles of his mills surrounded Pltis- farm tractor out of commission for | ‘tell-us who is vice-president of the | agrced to resume work today on the ercclion of sixty-five branch li \:-"]_nfs | little luck, and 5’: MRICR mace SUCh &'i‘ iy s stock could be nad | burgh. He resched into Uppée % = a s P = that the strikers ) the metropolis Another miliion | generosity possible ams sS 8 k el ety - les away, & iy i the day to find a means of locomo- | republic of Ireland?” That is not a | understanding that the strikers would | in the metropoli oA merdstty posslble L line thel sy ana o wbaa L everts NIRRT o W vy g bl tion fair question. Why very few grown | not be penalized for refusing to work | he gave for a library in St. Louis. arneg s fon I ¢ Rapidl t : a family o quired vast vegions of ore land. He people can tell you who is vice-presi- | and that the government introduce a “T) have just begun to give money | story himself. Rapidly covered it ment. Ata “‘?.:EI' 1:‘”"1;: 1);‘,“ :‘f:‘v‘d quir ogtor 3 When ths gasoline gives out, if it | gent of the. United States.—Houston | ball at the earliest possible moment | away,” he said in announcement of | was this: H st perey he earned | Carncgie’s mothe dccided she L " il Mloes, there will be a great repolisn- | Post. 1aboh:~hm; night bakin ‘Lhe": gifts. He kept it up as fast as { unexpectedly as a child when he as- ' mortgage her little home or 500.