The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 24, 1923, Page 8

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The Seattle Star Published Dally by The Star Publishing Co, 1 ‘MA in-0800. Newspaper Buterprite Association Mail, out of city, 600 per month, 8 months By carriar, city, 800 a month, Gilman, Nicoll & Ruthman, Special ‘office, Monadnock Bidg,; Chicago oftics “Canadian Pacific Didg.; Boston office, Why Not Always? ‘HRISTMAS is easily the finest, mast enjoyable day in the year, because of the gifts and feasting, and cause on Christmas the best and finest of human emo- ons and ethics come to the surface, | Charity, tolerance, geniality, brotherhood, kindness— se are so in evidence at Christmas that they seem to ‘in the very air we breathe. And the m is that all se are Christian qualities, and that Christmas is the day when these finer qualities are so generally pres- that they are a natural part of daily life, Humanity is struggling for a goal unknown, We won- ‘der if that goal is not the happy time when the spirit of ‘Christmas will, instead of being confined to a day or a if m, spread out to include all days of the year, Let not Premier Stanley Baldwin be downhearted. The American lec: ure platform is his as a last resort. @ monthe $2.00, year & Represei ribune mont Dk tative Ban Francisco New York office, How easily the female of the species slips from the age of dolls to that Plenty of Room OADS, 8,820 miles long, were built or improved with financial aid from the national Sennen: during he last fiscal year. _ That seems a lot, and is, in a sense. But the total » mileage of country roads in America is|nearly 300 times With Neff, of Texas, and Invasion B | tures, the multitude wh § big. So there’s no such thing as too much of the good ds movement. The main goal is mileage, when it ould be building for permanence. Gov. Gardner, Missouri, wants to be the demogratic presidential can. and favors use of the army for fighting tha rum battalions. His may be the first 6% hat in the ring. is a fortune awaiting the man who can telljus how to park with- Color the Alcohol OLOR gasoline rcd, as a safety measure to prevent its being-mistaken for water, urges W. A. Jacobs. le’s a government chemical engnicer. [While we don’t jubt that a lot of people are buying disguised gasoline n their bootleggers, if there’s any red coloring to be me let’s apply it to wood alcohol. Government is crim- ly negligent in not safeguarding the public against ‘Wood alcohol the same as it restricts the sale of all other ison | Brooklyn charch society of women has decided that girls who earn $20 a week should not buy fur coats. But what can they do with all money? ‘The fellow on the get-rich-quick highway © ‘ses a lot of fino scenery. Getting Too Big (CLAIMING 400,000 school pupils in New York city are denied full-time study because of the shortage of School buildings, parents formed an association to fight for more schoolhouses. This association is now on the warpath. New York city already is spending more than $100 a for each of its 978,000 pupils, but that seems to be ifficient. er cities are in the same boat. Cities are rapidly becoming “impossible” for child-raising. After a city ‘Passes a certain point, it begins breeding wilderness dis- ntages that cities were supposed to end. Gardner, of Missouri, throwing hats into the it seems that little Oscar Underwood isn't the Solid South so much he thinks he is. ‘The league of nations is discussing daylight saving now. ‘The insidious of mah jongg may be taken up next. Deal Gently kind to the pestiferous insurance agent who follows you to your home, your office, your garage, your olf links, whithersoever you flit. He is the representa- dive of grievous trouble. ' Among the claims presented the Aetna Co., during the , were these: Thirty-nine slipped on soap in bath- ib, costing the company $5,750; 505 tripped over rugs, ‘costing $44,857 in damages; 369 fell downstairs and col- ected $34,596 ; five collided with other dancers and made claims; 16 golfers were hit by balls and nine fell into _ This is a record for one big company only, and the fellows who broke their collar bones while sneezing, the Tyriads who fell off the stepladder while hanging pic- 0 took hootch and curled up are not in this record. | Consider, in the light of the Golden Rule, the gent who is gunning for your signature to a policy. Some sorrow Teflects upon him, when you dance, fatally, with neigh- _ bor’s wife, or miss your tee and “put” yourself into a hazard of surface water. Democratic state administration in Ohio announces republican national fonvention will have to be completely dry. Is there no hor politicians? New York censor sent policeman to report on a play called “Hamlet.” ‘The cop reported it was very original but not particularly risque. Just a Little Fraud ‘OU didn’t get excited, we trust, when you read re- " cently that North Dakota had voted 50,379 in favor jef Coolidge and 27,340 for Johnson? ‘ That wasn’t in the “preferential primaries,” it was anly a “state proposal convention.” And it might be worth explaining just what such a convention really 3. , A “state proposal convention” is a little invention of Old Guard for political propaganda purposes. i bers are self-appointed members and agents of the (ld Guard in the old parties. They “elect” themselves to to a meeting which they call a “convention,” and there ley get up and say in effect: “I come from a district which nominally polls 10,000 @epublican votes. I, therefore, vote those 10,000 for Cool- idge.” Another man gets up and says, “I come from a Wistrict polling 7,000 votes. I cast those 7,000 votes for *Hi’ Johnson.” Those 10,000 voters and those 7,000 Woters have not authorized these “delegates” to vote them for any candidate. They may be still undecided in their minds who they want, but the secretary of the con- Wention pulls out a big pad of paper and adds up the Seore, so that when this room-full of professional poli- Hicians have each voted their ghostly constituents, the secretary's score reads in the thousands, and the story goes out that “Coolidge has won” by so many thousand votes. + The same game is played by the “Old Guard” demo- erats in a democratic ‘state proposal convention.” It isn’t a very important matter, but it is a little po-, litical fraud worth exposing. ir among ts Unele Joe Cannon, in voluntary retirement at Danville, M1, has quit Diack cigars and black coffee. That boy will grow up into a molly-coddle set. Give Calvin due credit—he has the courage of Melayn’s convictions, THE SEATTLE STAR B) VIObET" VP Tice 111 je Swear SMILES Now is the time to get out your broken resolutions and patch them | up to start off 1924 right. Politicians lead a hard life, Get up jevery morning and spend the entire | }day in a quandary | There ts talk of drafting Henry} Ford for president, He wouldn't be| a conscientious objector. | pe | These European squabbles remind jus of a gamble in which no nation | }can quit while winning. | Christmas ts the time of peace on earth. This, however, is one thing | not made in Germany | Naval aviators wit try to My to |the North Pole, which ts the old home-town of Janitors, | } >| a| | a | Prince Youssoupoff, an art crit probably got his name from a Il of soup-eating ancestors, Every government has its good }points, In Moscow, they aro p all the gamblers in jail. | pa American girl in Paris hit {t un ky. Man couldn't steal her heart, | so he stole her jewels. j Los Angeles bank runner spent $15,000. Ho may have mistaken him- self for a movie star. “What a Wife Learned” ts a new movie, If complete, it would be the longest movio ever made. | | | | | | | | Two detectives wero fired in Mil-| | waukee, Wis. If you need some old | |clews they may s6li cheap. | | ——— | | Geraniuma {n a bedroom are not} |harmful and are excellent for bur-| glars to stumble over at night. | | Apply camphor ice to cracked Ips land don't get the boss mad enough he make you lat “Prominent Women Speak”—head- | line. Well, all women do that. | | By tho time you find the needle in the haystack, it {s rusty, | What could make a bald man cuss | more than heavy hair on his arms? | ‘The best trained seals in the world jare Red Cross Seals. | | | A pecullar situation in Europe ts |the more they owe the United tates the larger their army, Never slap your wifo or at her. Over $17,006,000 all- | mony {* paid yearly {n America. make | | ne ‘The United States spent $847,804,-| |654 for amusements last year, yot seemed to be very little amused. eras | Big cement company went broke| v York. Let this be a concrete mple of bad management. | Utah university boys have been ordered to quit drinking. Where do} college boys get so much money? to | is} | Harv professor is trying |teach two apes to talk, which harder than teaching talkers to ape. s from Persia. The shah says} likes jazz. Aw, shah! Politicians remind us of fire de. | partments, -alarm and away Michigan psychologist finds mix- Jers make the most mon If he} means drink mixers, yes. New York cop's wife hit him, so ed her. Th jea. for Ky. got or enough to last a wo days 0,000 cigaret | | | | | Chic hoy went to a d: unde ps got him, ted him noe in his but pneu | monia wan | The first snow in fe and amu much ears and years Two houses 6 blown down an't H. Washington. udena, Cal Johns¢ ead could be elected pre by the bootleggers, | it ident quickly Christmas Costs Us About 10,000,000 Trees BY RUTH FI ¥ Washington Burean, 1888 New York Ave, ASHINGTON, Dec When the tumult and shouting about world court, taxes and bonus dies, then may the voice of Representative Mar- tin L. Davey, Ohio, be heard in congress proclaiming that the most important thing in all the world is nothing more nor less than a leaf. Davey in private lifo !s mana- ger ofthe Davey Treo Expert Co., and when he Is not up at Washington, he spends his time in tree surgery He has studied forestr nd is one of the best-informed men in the country on this subject. To go back to tho leaf, “AN human life depends on tho leaf," says Davey, “It ts the one connecting link between organic and inorganic matter. The leaf in the only thing In the world that can take organic elements from the soil and trans- form them into living, organic Everything wo cat and nearly everything we wear comes to us from vegetation.” And then he goes on to show that when you cut trees, you en- danger your water supply, your fertile soil, your chances for hydro-electric development; in- crease the danger from flood, famine and drought. and decreaso your rainfall, thus changing your climate, “The troub! fusea to think for the future. nays Davey. ‘The president says the paramount issue before tho country today {4 taxation. That 4s the popular view, no ft is the one tho representatives of tho take also, Taxes are im- » but not in comparison h saving the nation by sav forestry policy is g00d as far an tt goes, but it Is equate that it of- to America.” John Davey, Since he founded his business 20 years ago, Dave estimates his family has saved the proximately 400,000 trees. When Christmas is over, the United States will have squan- dered something Ike 10,000,000 trees, representing 150,000,000 4 of tree growth, according to Davey. yrork too, a Yet even in the {aco of this , Davey says ho han not the heart to propose leg. {sation which would prevent children from having their Christmas trees, "If this were the only waste, the country could stand it," he says, “The big loss comes thru private interests, lumber companies which cut trees too younge and are caro lean about the fire menace.” ask congress for r safeguarding for- and extending the reforesta- tion policy at this session cells. fur Js that man ro- SCIENCE The Heavens |THE STORY OF A COW AND AN ANCIENT LAW Angus McDonald ta a near Winnipeg, Manitoba. The other a one of his cows wandered aboard, | was caught by officers and placed in the ponna Angus went to the pouna, releared the cow and drove her home. He was at once arrested on the charge of “pound-breach,” tried ani vieted. The judgo made a discovery when ho looked up the law what punishment he | a retired of 1 has finished g the entire heavena He photograpred the south heay- the Cape of Good Hope, South | and the north hemi he at Godalming, John merchant Franklin Adams, ndon, here NK |} to ascertain ing of these photo-| might inflict, Sraphs took eight years. The plates! ‘The Canadian law fixed no penalty wero complete in 1911 and additional) and go resort was had to tho old work has brought the completion of English law the entire enterprise down the present. For years the to ‘The latter provides three penalties for pound-breach — deportation to counting of the] Australian penal colony, hahging or stars in Adams’ photographs has| cutting off the ears of the convicted been going on. The count is not yet! person complete, but enough has been dc That stumped the Judge and An to indicate the positions of over three | gus’ punishment is held in abeyance, thousand million of stars. | - —___— The work, while inten Ing to astronomers, and of value in indicating the positions of the stars, does not settle any such question as the shape of the universe or the num: ber of the stars. How many there are beyond the range of scientific|the sun go down upon your wrath. apparatus {s, of course, unknown.|—Eph. lv.:26, So far, astronomy teaches only one| thing where the size of the universe is concerned; insignificance of the earth in the scheme of universal immensity | interest WOMAN moved is like a foun troubled, muddy, bereft of ain thic kespeare FINE AS SILK BY BERTON BRALEY ) wrong for the shop girl there is no to tear completely Ing, beauty AYBR tt Highly extra of silk ts Soon they are finished Yet am I glad that th Spite of the fru: Nothing the daugt Look to wear ‘em, Stocking ea em, worn out vorking girls don ‘em, al and folk of that { ers of Eve « put on ‘em quite their stockings of s Feminine Give me the gleam of How can a leg be Where is the I'm no ¢ t Tam proud that Rich ones ar L? Shiftle i wort! and the best! liken y dre quite ani mooth stocking more fitting fabric it look » trim 1 kno I American women UT in the Leader of fashion or plain Mary God bless ‘em—were uld help hose—for the fla 6 grandmother country or up fn the city, meant to be pre much a. ix or elght pairs! Copyright, 192%, NWA Sarvice, Ino.) | east <3 ts NCSI Ete RR RS a ae RN eC | | Christmas Cards We'd Like to Send } ryman up| A THOUGHT |! Bo ye angry, and sin not; let not | ill-seem- | | nes: ING GEORG Il, of Greece, stood at the palace window looking down into the Athens nquaro last summer, watching 4 long row of bootblacks shining holiday shoes, “I'd rather be one of those,” he sald, turning to an American relief official, who was calling, “and free to do as I like, than bo a king, like this.” Maybo he'll have his wish, They've just sent him into exile and set up a Greek republic, Tho king business gets worse every day. ‘The fall of George II probably means the disappearance forever from Greece of his ill-fated dy- nasty. He is the fourth of his line, modern Greece's fifth king, and not one has come to a good ond, The first Greek king was Prince Otto, son of the king of Bavaria, He mounted the throne in 1832 and was dethroned in MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1928, A King Who’d Be a Bootblack BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS 1863 during @ revolution which went him and Queen Amelia into exile, George I was Greece's second king, Ho was Prince William George, son of the king of Den- mark, He was assassinated while on an Inspection tour at Sa- loniki during the Balkan war, But for foreign intervention— British, Russian and French-— he would have been dethroned by his subjects during a military coup against him in 1900, Constantine succeeded King George. He was driven from the country by the allies in 1917, charged with being proGerman, Hoe abdicated in favor of his sec ond son, Prince Alexander, Returning against the allied will in 1920, he launched the fa- tal offensive against the Turks in Asia Minor, The disaster which overtook hig army in 1922 brought on a revolution in Greece and out he was forced again, his second and last exilo, woon after, As Aloxander had died in 1999, Prince George, King Constan, tino's oldest son, now assumed the crown, but the dictatorship, vet up by the chiefs of the revo. jution, Cols, Gonatas and Plas. tras, left him virtu oner in his own pal terly without authority, He was afraid to trust his own servants lest they be sples, nor could he take a walk without be. ing watched and guarded, The poor king might escape: George Il did not want to be King. ‘The crown was thrust upon him, Willingly he might have swapped it for the most dilapidated sky-plece in Athens and his sceptre for a blacking. brush had he but been given the chance, Today there's one ex-king in the world who is probably heay. ing a nigh of relief, LA WHAT FOLKS ARE SAYING DR, T. G, B. KAY, English rector: “I am sure the heart of America \s sound and that the dollar js not thelr god, au so many of us believe, Their {deal is wervice. The American sees with a different eye because his coun- try 1s new and young. His idea in size and ours is age, and I venture to think both are wrong.” SECRETARY OF LABOR DAVIS: “Today we are realizing our mistake, for we mind we are turning out 90 per cent of our youth equipped only for the so-called white-collar occupa tions which can provide jobs for only 10 per cent of them, We cannot con- |tinue to keep America in the van- guard of civilization if we permit the | American people to become exclusive ly a white-collar people. Hies in education, in tho training of \the band of youth as well as the head. | | DR. WILLIAM STARK MEYERS, | professor of politics, Princeton unt | vernity: “I am of the opinion that the same remedies that were found necos |sary for the control of monopolistic | corporations of wealth may be found necessary for monopolistic corpora tions of labor, J. ¢., the labor unjons I will plead for them that at least legitimate public restraint, lest they develop, as easily they may, into a menace for the community at large. A democracy has no place for unre strainéd and irresponsible power.” MRS. WILLIAM women's rights “Women should column instead of a wishbone. Wom en meet men in their homes ax fath ers, husbands, equality; why not {n political and pro- fesnional life?" Hi, McGRAW, leader, Detroit W. L. GEORGE, It must be agreed that the novel is the real representative of American literature, Modern literature ts the novel. A hundred years ago, liter: literaturo then was poetry, Even the novels, say of Scott, than entertainment. today has criticism of life, it has the flavor of life. American life is the greatest play t has ever been ntaged and the American novel leads the world In literature."* MRS. NA 8. TAYLOR, Bus! ness Woman's club, Philadelphia “American home life is not disap: pearing. The trul ; BAY |by-night folks are in the min out conspicuously be: The averag appreciates and actions man and woman works for a home.” JUDGE Kk. M. WANAMAKER, Ohio: “The great Issue America, with all due respect, is not international—it is domestic. It is law against lawlessness, and It ts ut- ter folly to smoke-screen it further |It is pressing upon every side.” REY. L. M. BIRKHKAD, Unita: |ian, Kansas City: “The spirit of the age is on tho side of progress in re- ligion, Already hell has been abol ished. People have a more human jview of sus. Our ideas of the | Bible are changing rapidly. It has |become a human book. We no lon |ger believe in the fo of man, but rather in his rise, Character counts for so much more than creeds. Most now think at to live wisely ell here is th for whatever r come herent Frieda’s Follies speak louder than 1d mottod. E most grand old things, Y¥ reliable. YOU KNOW how acceptable stor. political candidate, man was in the Hs | midst OF A campa RANGE how some mon in the | Hmelight OP virtues, that, hereto N unknown, AST to their family MAN'S patience tounding IN A public debate, HE WOULD have tion on it HAD son's hide THE NEXT day WITH ME one Was as won the elec not taken it out on his es, CHINA PROGRES nil behind t is proof of thi n he to ‘The An, wh right dovelop business and hone What's more he has suppressed the opium traffic which {s no small Job in any section of China, improv roads, ment fore ism i] stry Telling It to Congress CUTTING THE H. © OF L. I do not believe that you can de- crease the cost of living today unless the farmers of this country organize, You have got 34,000,000 farmers or| people living upon the farms today in America. You havo got 19,000,000 people who are living out of market- jing farm products. Now, if the|cumulated experience as command. farmers will organize, and going general of our armies in Europe direct to the consumers, and elim-jand his virile interest in our mill. Inate \about 12,000,000 to 14,000,000 |tary establishment in questions af. people who are now living off mar-|fecting the national defense are rea- keting farm products, and do it in |#ons which convince me that a great an orderly way, which I am sure| mistake will be made if the present they will do, why, we can bring|law on the subject of retirement about a reduction in the high cost | (compulsory at 64) is allowed to bar of living, which we will all agree is | further active military service to the esvential in this country.—SENATOR |nation by him, — SECRETARY which constitutes tho aristocracy of the lumber industry; and then the yellow pine, which 1s the step-child=- Ww. Cc, {D before senate select committee on reforestation, eee “BLACK JACK” Gen, Pershing’s vast fund of ao Our hope| glish novellst: ture and poetry were synonymous, as were no more But the novel} today in| best preparation | GOODING in Sénate Commission of Gold and Silver Inquiry, see CALIFORNIA LEADS There was more oll produced last year in California alone than in the rest of the world. — SENATOR |SMOOT, Utah, In senate committee on public lands and surveys. Paver KINDS OF LUMBERING Lumbering, as wo see it in the Northwest, is divided into three |clases—the substantia! or Douglas |flr group, which is the bulwark of the industry; the white-pine section, | WEEKS, {nsertea by Senator Har- |ris (D.) Georgt: | owe THE POOR POSTMAN The postal carrier has to face all kinds of weather, bear the conscious- |ness of being charged with an im- | portant trust and the physical strain |of enduring the hardships of carry- |ing a heavy pack and traveling his | route in ali kinds of weather year in and year out. For all this the postal service pays a minimum of $26.92 and | maximum of $34.61 per week after |three years. ‘ATOR WALSH |(D.) Massachusetts. | Uncle Joe Cannon Finds this is my sincere wish and Intention | —that the unions be brought within! Amusement at Card Table Friendly Game of Poker or Dominoes Favor- | . ite Sport of A | | DANVILLE, Ill, Dec. 24.—Ques broglio and presidential candidacies have no part in the life today of brothers, with perfect | Uncle Joe Cannon, Danviile’s Grand |Old Man, who voluntarily retired last March from public life after 50 | years in congress, | The things that most concern | Uncle Joe are the chances of filling jhis hand or confusing his oppon- jents with a “picture book” or an ‘all blue” hand in a friendly gan jof poker, or of avolding too many | trips to the “boneyard,” in the game of dominoes he plays with | members of his family, Twice weekly three or four of Uncle Joe's old cronies meet with | him, sometimes at thelr homes, for a real battle with the pasteboards, or, as Uncle Joe characterizes it, “Di cussion of the right of property And these old cronies remark the morning after that Uncle Joo aj parently has lost none of his skill when jmany a vital question of national Importance was discussed and set- | tled* over a hotely contested game of poker, Uncle Joo Cannon belongs in a past era. For him’ the sun is near- ing the horizon. It is not the friends of the heyday of his career who greet him now on the streets —it Is thelr sons and grandsons, His attitude toward life and the affairs of the world {s best des- cribed by the one word, “det He does not dwell in the past, does he speak much of it, unle: the subject is brought up in h prese Neither does he talk of or the world, unless, pressed, and then he is apt to dismiss the sub- ject with a few words. Uncle Joe k s in touch with af- jfairs by reading the daily paper | morning and ni He dally visits | hls sp the nds an maybe two, officera and ¢ ps and chats with th tron. r, with humblest He walks to and from his home to the bank without assistance, des- pite his 87 years, He carries a cane, but the stick is yet subser- | vient to his will Uncle arisos at 8 o'clock in tho morning, breakfasts leisurely, reads his still voluminous corre spondence and the morning papers jand then walks to the bank, Fre- quently he returns home before lunch, in time to enjoy a game or |two of dominoes, of which he {s quite fond, with members of his family. After luncheon he enjoys a in his automobile, almost jdaily going out in the country to }a flowing well and securing a sup | ply of drinking water for the home. | He partakes | with the |reads tho of dinner members at night of his family and evening papers, after |which, if no friends have drop jin for a chat ¢ & game of ca he enjoys the program on his | be retiring for the nigh! enjoys his radio outfit, but still fluent! en beatim witched on in place of ted concert number | curses wl | story ¢ the ext s.| ATTENDS QUAKER , CHURCH ionally t tends the It located is he Greeted who the I ptaye h bearded men 48 a boy thelr sons and grandsons who shake sometimes at his home and/ in poker which he acquired during} ’-| hit 50 years in Washington, the affairs of the state, the nation! nk, the Second National. and} It's! a ged Statesman j hands with him and Inquire after cultivate a spinal} “9ns concerning the European im-| his health. He still recalls with interesting | anecdotes the struggling days as a young lawyer at Shelbyville, Ind, | where he practiced for a year with- out receiving one cent from a cli- lent, and from where he went to | Tuscola, because he had no money to pay his railroad fare further. Uncle Joe's leisure hours are spent in his capacious library, from the walls of which framed photo- graphs, autographed, of Roosevelt, Cardinal Gibbons, Ambassador Jus- serrand and other noted friends of other days smile down at him. The walls are also decorated with the original drawings of dozens of car- toons, most of which show Uncle Joe with his famous long black gic, In connection with his famous stogie, it is interesting to know that Uncle Joe has quit the use of | tobacco and coffee, two articies he has used all his life. He gives no reason for becoming a total ab- stainer; simply says he quit be- cause he didn’t see where they were benefiting him any. Uncle Joe has no comment to make on the presidential situation. He says he simply doesn't care who runs, providing he is a good repub- lican, He is still sought for ad- vice and favors and a contemplated removal of the United States mar- shal's office from Danville to East St. Louis has been held up pend- ing the final word from Uncle Joe. But, all in all, Danyille’s famous statesman is living a life of ease | and retirement, viewing life and the | world from the sidelines in a de- tached manner, For Uncle Joe, life is no longer }an onward and upward journey. |Its course is now downward, its | pathway as placid as loving rela- [yee and friends can make It. | a THIS GAS PUTS YOU TO SLEEP, WAKES YOU | In the hospitals ana elsewhere, ether is used to superinduce uncon: sciousness, or sleep. Prof. David Lumsden, of the fed+ jeral horticultural board at Washing- jton, use: awaken plant life. He hacks a plant, deep in its win- |ter sleep, from icy soll, carries it in- side a warm room, gives it an in- halation or injection of ether, and instantly it wakes up and begins to grow and sprout and blossom. He has tried this sort of thing on roses jand other plants and, in every case he has succeeded in stimulating them usually quick ¢ In no case » found that a plant was injured, but, on the con- trary, all have seemed to be more healthy and more pi of blossom, | * i | GOOD ROADS GROWING |. Showing tt tn str 12 will be from which the Mag flown in all its glory,

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