The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 16, 1905, Page 8

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FRANCISCO CALL. TUESDAY, THE SANFRANCI s it .Proprietor JOMN D. SPRECKELS.. ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO MCNAUGHT. .. JOIN .-- THIRD AND MARKET STREETS. SAN FRANC * 3 “DON QUIXOTE" TYPICAL NOVEL MAY 16, 1905. # ODD BITS CULLED FROM THE NEWS | In May 1605, Miguel de Cervantes pub- lished the first part of “Don Quixote.” and this month Spain is holding a num- CHURCHMAN | EIGHT FEET TION OFFICE. = = - “MAT 16, 1805 | °T Of festivais in commemoration of this | BECOMES A TALL; STILL e » 1999 great achievement of a great Spaniar I = : S S~ = | T the May number of the North Ameri-: BARTENDER GROWING DISTRIBUTION OF IMMIGRANTS | can Review Havelock Eliis contributes an b . extremely interesting article, entitlel g o A “The Tercentenary of ‘Don Quixote, ” on M‘:T: efinks Glant Applies ois c - 7 Cervantes and his career. Mr. Ellis ac- e Vet~ for Life In- in the large cities of the East there are 10,000,000 | cords to “Don Quixote” the supreme A The number may be exaggerated, but the :’r‘:”'ua;:g:fa::'{kfll:é 2;’::’({; fi:dgs'l’n:'& % 3 surance. very year sees an appreciable increment to the | that there may be others—such as the ISHOP POT- WORGE. " AT- P T B S T T .d also | Rovels of Flaubert, “Tristram Shandy TER and the bk it manent indigents in this country. It is state Robinson Crusce’: “Tom:Jones’® efe.— o - F ity of these pe indige e cign im- | which are finer works of art, more ex- ubway Tav. New York BN 3 e P g Fk i Sex gD 4 quisite in style and of more perfect plan. | €T have been dis- | youth, 22 years sen these land, they join the “colonies” of their coun- | But they are not equally amusing,| counted in the | old. § feet 1 inch R AR : 3 1 equally profound, to the men of all na-| village of Hunt- | tall, and located in cities, and remain there, a fixed problem, | SVET B0 azes and all degrees Of | erstown, Pa bl :m ;;:l:;u congestion of the slyms and adding every year gdu-m::lmcapuiu‘ as “Don Quixote” I8} where a Sunday- | He applied for . 4 By et : 2 r. s say & atures of city life. The problem of their care is be- | "“"pon Quixote' remains the one great Tboo‘; .uperl'\n- $10,000 life insur- ‘ oo large. 5 ., B to chatity typical novel. It is a genuine invention; | tendent amd | ance policy sev- too large. Private 1,(,718\'(»] nce an(} Pul?lxg C harl’t? cmmél | So7 it combitied. for. the first s the ol ] MetodistiTuteost I| ¢oor oy :‘o. ke the maintenance of 10,000,000 of indigents. To do sO | chivalrous stories of heroic achuew’emenl‘ pal Shvbel Aeanon o Fm e fragl O 8 2 haieat ik in R It i 1ass of ignorance | with the new picaresque stories of vulgar | || O S ; = v yreak reasury of an empire. is a mas gn | adventure, creating in the combination | TR §ERCE 4 as a rule, fight s i i f charity c | v e bar o hy of glants. It z ense t n iminis C harity can do |something that was altogether new, an r shy 1.< : hat no adminis tra.h(m ',r C J | instrument that was capable of touching | the local tavern, | they find the ake it more sensible of its misery. life at every point. It leads us into an | mixing cocktalls | slightest defect in tion is treated by some as a problem of distri- s mass of idleness and want grows like a2 great i cities, there is in the country an unsatisfied the stream of immigration that pours into lands. Recruited t seaboard stops where i anks of povery, ignorance and squalor in the it, this alien stream adds to the hard t is proposed that the Government at rtake the distribution of the immigrants that increasing numbers. The proposition” is un- 1g at the rate of 20,000 a day, some- emit » will cost more per head than the price | atmosphere in which the ideal and the real are equally at home. It blends to- gether the greatest and the gayest things and drawing beer like a veteran. At them the" insur- ance people have |in the worid. It penetrates to the har- | '1® Present time | no hesitation in | mony that underlies the violent contrasts | the tavern is the | geclining to in- | of life, the only harmony which in our | SHOW place of the wtieh R Sk | moments of finest insight we feel to be | town. o e han 6 | possible, in the same manner and, in-| For a long time ;“ :’ Bty | deed, at the same moment—for ‘Lear’ aD-| the saiobn had ee! r ncl is, in their opin- | peared in the same year as ‘Don Quixote’ fon, afficted with | Zibat Shakespeare brought together in | DR conducted in | the madman and the fool on the heath | & manner unsat- | . ' ..o gisease {in 2 concord of divine humor. It is a| isfactory to the |, ;eq ‘“gigan- | story book that a child may enjoy, a | churchmen of the 5 tragicomedy that only the wisest can| town. Finally tne | T 1t ususlly | fully understand. It has irspired many | of the masterpieces of literature; it has entered into the lives of the people of every civilized land; it has become a part means that, after a protracted pe- riod of growth, the giant dies. landlord, Franklin Thomas, told his critics they had their ocean passage. The most of them do not want to be dis-|ot cur human civilization.” better supply him it e O T he Governmeni to ship them anywhere with a bartender | cal board at the & hins doubihd = Wikt g § who could run | Equitable offices as doubtfol. What do we swant. of | RESFITE. things on an ap. | » lower Broad- g vy the line oi least resistance in dis- o o b‘; way ‘“sat on” Au- Rt Come, kindly sleep, from thy far home of | sis. fre ey tond the difference between the ik Efll‘u- S " The offer was | perfect. His hab- alien i fifty and sixty years ago. elp me steal a little time from life | gecepted and | its of life were g g ol For happmess. The storm encroaches not || George Little, the | examined into ey had definite plans when they Where (hou art-—nor the ugliness of | most prominent | and wers pro- d to do and sought of their ¥ ;| church worker in | nounced good. 4 i An + town, was select- Auger is not h i co id be »b(_: done. These that | They :::hv.fi} ;::teh—uzsg e mtrainge | e e | waak I iinw now s 1 that kind of zmjes:gh., and hence t}}xs Their bate hath blackened yesterday— | G€murTed, out at | knees, as most n th to make up their lack of that quality to-day. ’:::‘-" hl: “l“'Y g!"“d‘:"“:l':fi h‘:fi .o . . 3 ’, made clear is re dle 1o look about for power in the Govern- | Give m> good Lethe’s cup, thrice blessed Biss right 4 ¥ sleep; to , and he ight. these people after they land. It has no such| j wul forget to-morrow while T may. donned a white “I served for a it has the power to distribute ovr nalive es the icat is in the torn gravity the siimation. i of listening io the apron and went to | time on the Lon- —Century. w(n)rk. don police foroe,’; ) e . One et{ect of the, | said the giant; * 6JOA”" EXPEDITION. | :woiorm e’ s | kopt srowing ans ence in the bar- show business. I z: which at the same | The Geographical Sccieiy of the Pacific | room as patrons, | was born In Car- i th has just published a bulletin containing | of some very good diff, Wales. I migranis, most Of themi | the paper read by Henry Lund, Consul of | churchmen who | have to take good cees fr nt indigence in their own coun: 2> Poablic! Swa;:x;and N;mz. beullorxe‘“;h: soclety | hitherto gave the | care of my hean‘)i ety b : 3 P - - on February “ons ’s paper | ta wue | because I'm stil ¢ staggered by the task of feeding, clothing, | treats of the Norwegian “Gjoa” expedi- be::h.m St | a growing boy.” for 10.000,000 of panpers. How can such a only one way. Cease adding to the mass e. Exclude Ewnropean immigraiien just as rigidly hat we have 10,000,000 of people idle and pauperized the demand for labor and the supply are disjointed. » 2dd 1o the supply while the demand y is worse than fclly. I philanthropy be involved sion of European immigration it is 2 mistake to ask, in ame of that virme. for the admission of these people. It is pot age to come. It does them no good. and i harms le. The only beneficiary is the country from whick me. It is draining off its.population. It is getting ard weakest. It is equalizaz Iabor swply wnb It is securing conditions that reduce permanvent in- It is transferring its hard conditions and adv ) 2 minimum. lem of 2bout referring the resnlts to inherent flaws in yvernment and to social conditions. * g ot ouor social conditions. The trouble is that twenty vears we have submitted to be the dumping i of all Europe. It is known, proved by evidence, thai, taking age and of the supineness of our poli- , other Governments have herded their paupers, insane, fee- minde m none of our romantic folly, d and incorrigible, and have grobstaked them as emi- | nts to the United States { No country can stand as 2 scapegoat for the whole world. The | we invited people to “come from every nation, come - way,” because Uncle Sam was rich enongh to buy for , has gone. Roast pigs no longer run around with knife and k in their hams, asking to be eaten. We have passed our romantic youth as 2 nation, and are not called upon to weep fork s over the sorrows of distant millions, and to offer them an as_r]um.‘ We need not yearn even to divide our liberty with our brother from a distance. who does not know what it means. If we grown old enough and big enough to have 10.000000 of indigent | people in our city slums, we can best use our age and wisdom in dealing with the awful problem they present to us Let it be understood, too, that we cannot solve that problem and at the same time take in 1,000,000 a year of refugees from the same problem in Emrope. Trhe subdivision of the numerous large landed estates. The Sacramento Valley especially has suffered from these large estates, that were held together by the pride of possession. For a long time the tendemcy of large holdings was to increase rather than diminish. A small holder would acquire land joining one of these principalities and would go on improving his place and rear- ing his family, to finaily discover that he was isolated, had no neighbors and that there was no school for his children. Then he wanted to sell and there was no buyer except the owsner of the do- main which had isolated him, and his holding was added to an estate already too large for the good of the commonwealth. In. that way the rural population of the Sacramento Valley ac- tually decreased for several years. There was a steady diminution in the number of country homes and families, and in the number of farms. While this was going on in the Sacramento Valley the reverse was in progress in the San Joaquin, for, notwithstanding the large holdings of the Kern County Land Company and of Mil- ler & Lux, the small holdings in that valley rapidly increased. This was done by men of means buying up large tracts of land at what might be called a wholesale price per acre and cutting it into smal! holdings that sold readily at a retail price which, while not high, gave 2 handsome profit. This process has now extended to the Sacramento Valley, with results which deserve to be studied be- cause they disclose the value of California land. ' The Cone ranch in Tehama County, an area of 100,000 acres, has Dbeen taken by a syndicate at a wholesale price and is being rapidly sold in small tracts at a minimum of $50 and a maximum of $100 per acre. These prices, while so reasonable that the sales are rapid, are yet a significant index of the value of California land. These lands are about 150 miles from San Francisco, and are re- mote from other large centers of population. . It is known that nearness to concentrated populations is an element of value in agri- SETTLING SMALL FARMERS HE cryving economic need of California for years has been poverty 1o ns, and we wail about it, and impalsive | tter of fact there is no structuzral weakness in onr Gov- | | | ton to the maguetic north pole, and is highly interesting. The bulletin also con- | tainz a map showing the Toute of the ex- | Ppedition. other woman automobilist is rarely seen on her car without her pet pen- j guin, Arisfides, which she frequently takes with her into shops, the intelli- gent creature carrying her handbag in his Dbill. toads as tonneau pets.” —_—————— — Women's Queer Pets. “A London society woman,” aceord-l | iz to report, “has a small white be- | ribboned pig sitting beside her when she rides out in her automobile. An- | FASHION'S MIRROR | Jia | | i | i | | | Another delights in horned | City. j Chicago, Ill., you will have to write a ' fragrance ! literary bloom of sentimental fancy. | MIRAGE SHIP |WINS TITLE | MAMA CASTS ' CO-EDS AT * THE SMART SET + By Saily Sharp William Greer Harrison was host at a breakfast on Sunday in heonor of M IS SEEN ON OF IDEAL FOSIES AT | A CHICABD |juna Mariowe ana E. H. Sothern e red soom of the Bohemian Club. The ATLANTIC SERVANT| DAUGHTERS| DOPEPARTY . i ot tne most artietic aca TR o et G elaborate of the many important events Strange Craft|Girl 23 Years | Doting Parent|Sample Stuff|that have taken place within the cius : 5 ! The scheme of decoration, Chinese m Reported by in Chicago | Says They'te | and ‘'See | raracter. was carried out with min b » detall. A miniature joss-house erected . Liner. Family. Wonders. Things. ! at one end of the room gave forth the P Y 'odor of incense, while an immense Chi OME people HE problem B. HANNA ROFESSOR |nese umbrella flared above the ta think that of the serv- R.of Fort FREDER- !During breakfast an entertaining play- phantom ant girl is Wayne, Ind., ICK STARR, |let was enacted. adding greatly to the ships are things solved by Miss | who has just been the versatile an- | general enjoyment. Mr. Mersfeider also FLETA ik Kate Winston, | recommended for | thropologist of |gave an imitation of W. E. Sheridan in past, t | who has been the University of | the “Merchant of Venice,” calling forth the officers and | awarded a medal Chicago, s i i Postmaster there ] by Congressman- | and unlimited as they had seen their opinions service at former should receive write to ask if he | is single or mar- seen repairing “a damaged topmast. in cigarettes, and declined to “hit it up.” Those who North Atlantic Ocean, night h ing come on, the the name of her housekeeper as a contestant for the | | | { neat and tidy, and i themselves like- wise. All of which | | i -— e ANSWERS TO VARIOUS QUERIES. ONE MILLION STAMPS—M. C. L, | For information relative to soil for The United States Government k celery culture, address a communica- never offered a “price for a collection | tion to the agricultural experimental of one million canceled domestic | Hiaton. Univeraity - of . California, stamps.” erkeley, Cal. ADJOINING PROPERTY—S., Penns _ UNION—F. W. B., Fruitvale, Cal Grove, Cal. If you own a piece For such information as you ask im| vi mioperty in a city and wish to know relation to the Teamsters’ Union of | who owns the land adjoining send some one to the office of the Tax Coilector and there ascertain against whom the property is assessed; generally against the owner, but some times people own property and pay the taxes in the name CELERY—A. F. R., Clarksburg, O. of the former owner. e SPRING THIRST FOR LOVE LORE. letter of inquiry to the secretary of that union, as this department has no information on the subject. By Dorothy Fenimore. Dorothy Fenimore is now on her way to Europe to make a special study of matters pertaining to the subjects in which she is a special- ist, and will seon be giving the results of her critical observation to readers of The Call. She will spend most of the time she is abroad in " England and France. . In the spring the mind of man turns; to novels and to poetry, as the heart of man turns instinctively to love. When April softness fills the air and May turns the pastures and orchards of the world into a garden, we are eager to sip the honey from the In the spring we are hungry and thirsty for love lore, just as a little ! later in the year we are Hungry for | jece cream and thirsty for soda water. | Not satisfied to partake of nature’s largess, which she spreads before us with generous hands—not as if she were giving coins to beggars, but as 12 she were scsttering crumbs to birds | —we seek ¢o galn yet more delight | by swinging on love's pendulum of | romance between the lovers' heaven of hope and the black abyss of. lovers’ | fears. Are ‘we young? Then we turn to love stories from the same impulse that moves one when he gets to the | end of the road he is used to, and realizes as he goes onward that really . b he is just starting out. JUDGING BY WHAT HE LEFT. Do we feel that we are getting old? Harold—My only inheritance is i 74 B =3 — tied STYLISH SUMMER FROCK. For the graduation or for the confirmation frock this model is at once eminently stylish and girlish, and will fit in for many occasions all summer long. The material Is a white point d'esprit net over the new double width, one-seam crepe de chine, and just the requisite touch of . color is given In the little ceinture which fastens with a few loops at the lett side. This may be in either turquoise blue or coral pink, as best suits the young wearer; and the hair ribbons are NDDGM' to corre- spond. This touch of velvet is one of the most bewitching of the latest styles, and is to be seen. upon. all sorts of materials for summer wear, from the flimsiest to the heaviest of the -summer goods—silk, woolen and cotton. The round yoke is in a platte lace, the straight-edged in- sertion together, and left unlined, just. a layer of chiffon be- Then soring feels to us a rift of sun- Satin light in an opaque sky. With the re- nawal of the youth that fills with re- | Flossie—Then your fither was a joicing the old earth as it dances on bankrupt when he died? its way onee more beneath the indul- 2 i gence of a smiling sun, we feel that | our own youth is renewed, and we are eager to share again in all young im- pulses, and te find some shadow of the dear lost “glory and the dream,” to enjey love, if only vieariousyl. ' the happiness of storied lovers. Wht a man reads, so a man is, is an apothegm as true as that which clares a man to be what he eats. But love literature, which means a rejuvenation for adults. is not alwa equally good for the voung. who are likely to swallow it whole, and suffer from a kind of sentimental indiges- tion. The tendency of youth to model its conduct upon admired characters in the books it reads makes some books dangerous which would otherwise be innocuous. And young people have, unluckily. an ostrich appetite for fic- tion, without an ostrich’s power of assimilation. But. there are love stories enough to suit everybody, love stories which are an inspiration to high ideals, which refine one's love thoughts, which givé the reader new powers of emotional expression. In prose and in poetry there are sto: innumerable which breathe with that fine feeling which is the breath love. ¥ noble I And surely . if there is any season of the year when it is appropriate to read LIFE'S SUNNY SIDE | much applause from his hearer: crew of the big | by the School of | elect « Ibert of | achieved the | American Beauty roses adorned the Philadelphia liner | Pomestic Arts | the Twelfth dis- | “dope party.” He | table, which amid all its surroundings _ast Point think | 8nd Sciences of | trict, is a hand- | gave ome the |gave the appearance of a beautiful differently, having | CPiCag for con- | some man, and | other eveming for |cemterpiece. Marlowe was toasted been overtakes | tInUOUS faithful | among the per- | students and co- |in a speech by Mr. Phelan. Mr. Sothern and outsalled by | SeFVice for twen- | sons noticing his | eds, and the prin- | receiving a like complimént from Miss a magic craft off | 'Y three years. likeness in the | cipal attractions | Anna Strunsky. the Nantucket vuring that newspapers in were cigarettes The guests lncludfrl Miss Marlowe. Miss Shoals on her re- time she has been | conmection with [ compounded from | Anna s_mmaky, Miss Ednah Robinson, cent trip from | Ib the employ of | his appointment | “dope” used by |Miss Virginia Brastow. Dr. and Mrs. J. London to Phila. | Mrs- Willam L | was a woman at | the ancients, the | Wilson Shieis. Mr. and Mrs. John Me- delphia. Laoking | Beedy. 18 Ros- | Shipshewana, | wonderful Mexico |Naught, Dr. and Mrs. J. Demnis Arnoid, aft in the early | 08 Street north of Goshen, | jag-producer, a |Dr. and Mrs. Louls Lisser, Mr. and Mrs. | morning a bark- Her watchword | who is the mothér | sort of clay that |Hunter Harrison. Mrs. Youngbers. Mrs. rigged sail crare | 1% “Do every- | of three daugh- | ome smokes and | Willam Greer Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. was seen ap- thing right. ters, all of them | immediately has | Edgar Peixotto, Mrs. Woodward, Mrs. proaching, and all “If a girl does unmarried. ‘The vari - colored | Gerrit Livingston Lansing, Edward H. day long the ves- | everything right,” | woman wrote a | dreams; the skull Sothern, Dr. Wagner, Amedee Joullin, sel continued she says, ‘“she | Fort Wayne paper | of a micro-ce- Jerome Barker Landfleld, Dr. Arnoid abeam. .he East | Will always be | as follows: phalic idiot, a |Genthe, Charles Sedgwick Aiken, Jules l'olnt was hur- | Sure of a position “Dear Mr. Edi- | freak with extra | Mersfelder, James D. Phelan, Enrique ried along by her | and of being re- | tor_Having seen | fingers and |Grau St spey big engines, while | Spected and trust- | in your valuable | thumbs on all In the fair breeze | €d. One should | paper the an-| hands and feet, The engagement has been announced of Miss Margaret Newhall and Frederick the magic remember, t00, to | nou: was ae;t‘i jug:h“g look on the bright | B. ;‘;:",::“}og‘(& quantities of ice | Houghteling of Chicago. Miss Newhall fast. The forms | Side of every- | next Postmaster, | cream. in & dsughter of Mr. and Mra. W."Mayo of all hands | thing. and notieing by In addition to ]!:::vhl.ll of this city and made her debut aboard could be “An even' tem- his picture that all the attractions season. séen as they stood | per and a disposi- | he must be. a | enumerated, the | Mr. Houghteling is a son of James L. by and made and | tion to mive those | good-lookihgyoung | professor pro- | Houghteling of the firm of Peabady & shortened sail | you work for the | man and above | duced his 1000 | Houghteling, bankers, Chicago. Other sailors v-ere ‘weight they think the average, I | plaster skulls, but o - The engagement is announced of Miss Madge Moore and George Edward Par- There is no doubt | Will enable a girl | ried. If single I | banquets they |menter of Los Angeles. that it was a to continue with | will send him | were not includ- |entertain at a tea at her home on O'Far~ mirage reflected one family, and | photographs of | ed in the new fea- | rell street, May 20, prior to her departure hundreds of miles | then if we re- | my three daugh- | tures of the “dope |for Los Angeles, where the wedding will by peculiar at- | member that we | ters, who are, if | party.” Fully half |occur on the 28. Mr. Parmenter is well mospheric condi- | must follow the | I, as a doting | of the fifty stu- |known in San Francisco and is at the tions, but the pic- | example of the | mother, do say it, | dents present |head of the art department of the Los ture was perfect. | postage stamp | mot to be beat in | sampled the |Angeles Examiner. It was that of | and stick to one | the country for “dope” weed from Y. & A probably a | thing if we want | good looks. They | South _America. | The weu..ng of Miss Mabel McAfea, French fishing | to get there, we | can cook anything | Some of the girls |granddaughter of J. B. Haggin. and Louls vessel on the | will soon find our- | from spareribs | deciared that, ac- | B. Preston takes place to-day In St Grand Banks of | Selves worthy of | and sauerkraut to | cording to their | Thomas Church, New York. The brides- maids will be Miss Alice Preston, Miss Newfoundland. employment and | roast turkey and belief, the mari- - When the sun dis- | appreciated ac- | plum pudding. I | humana was ne | Edith M“n’b’"’:' l“_d 3‘_‘- Harriet Daly. appeared below cordingly."” have trained them | better than the - « the waters of the In submitting | to keep a house | ordinary ‘“‘dope” St. Dorothy’s Rest, the new home for convalescent children, will be dedicated May 31 by Bishop Nichols. Society women are very interested in this har- bor for little ones founded by Mrs. James strange craft | long service prize, | would be most | did smoke saw melted away and | Mrs. Reedy la- | valuable to a | double or quad- | Ots Lincoln in 1%2 in memory of hlef . was seen no more | conically stated: | Postmaster or any | ruple and thought lttle daughter, Dorothy Puckin Unl:t;!r;. except ‘in the | “She has —been | one looking for a | John D. Rocke- |at Camp Meeker, Sonoma \,mm;r Froom minds of those on | faithful for twen- | life companion. feller looked like ,Fofler of the California Northwestern the East Point, ty-three years.” “MOTHER.” wooden money. Railway has offered a p[r!\‘:a(:’dc:;n:;r those who will attend The fare, including return trip and lun- | cheon, will be $3, and those desiring such or any information may communicate with Mrs. James Otis Lincoln, San Mateo. A chapel, lately erected, has been do- { nated by a woman who does not wish to | be named. This is aiso to recelve con- | secration by the Bishop upon the date named. The Board of Managers of St Dorothy’s consists of Rev. E. L. Par | sons, president, San Mateo; Rev. James | Otis Lincoin, secretary-treasurer, San | Mateo; Mrs. A. M. Easton, San Mateo; Miss A. C. de Turbeville, San Francisco; Mrs. James Otis Lincoln, San Mateo. v . Richard Hotaling entertained several guests over the week's end at his eountry home at San Anseimo. 7 o Mrs. J. J. Spieker and Miss Georgie Spieker, who left a few months ago for Europe and the Mediterranean, are ex- pected home within a short time. ———————— Roumania is now the fourth largest petroleum-producing country in the world. The list is headed by the United States; then comes Russia. while the third place is held by Austria-Hungary. ———— — Townsend's Cala. Glace Fruits, In ar- tistic fire-etched boxes. 10 Kearny st and new store now open, 767 Market s&. & business houses and public men by e Tonas Gtreat® Telephons Matn 1042 5 fagoted - meath to obviate any look or hint of bareness.. There is a bertha below the yoke, and an extra frill to the top of the full bishop sleeve; while cultural lands. If, therefore, these remote lands readil bring that price, what is the conclusion as to lands of equal fertility nearer to the large city populations? The great deduction from it is that the large estates are gradually becoming too valuable to be held together, and their subdivision will come by natural processes. the bebe bodice drops without bagging into the: velvet belt. - The skirt is plain In front, shirred over the hips and back in yoke style, and two very full volants are put on with shirred above each hem. g 5 headings, and two rows of lace of love, and to gain through vicarious experience new knowledge of its depth and breadth and- height and its in- the pulses of the are beating to love's and man's " , b 5 THEN HE SAID 600D NIGHT. x AWFUL THREAT. Mr. Bore—Ah! that's a lovely Ma Cow (to errant offspring)— | song. It always carries me away. Don't you break into that garden Miss Cutting R. E. Marks—I'm with that naughty Jonesealf. If sorry I didn't sing it for you you get tough like him. the Beef . Trust'll

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